Post-Colonialism
Showing 193–208 of 209 results
Title & Subtitle | Contents | Contributors | Pages | Year | Purchase |
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From On Not Refusing CanLitFrom: Refuse |
In her contribution, Laura Moss foregrounds her roles as both professor and editor. Rather than avoiding issues of power in both these roles, Moss addresses them directly as a mode of both … | Laura Moss | 3 | 2018 | $0.30 Add |
From NEW! As We All Should Lie |
- | Jonathan Ball | 5 | 2020 | $0.50 Add |
From On Michael Coren: Amnesia and the Everyday Embrace of Racism and SexismFrom: Blank |
- | M. NoubeSe Philip | 4 | 2017 | $0.40 Add |
From Visions and Versions of Resilience: Mentoring as a Means of SurvivalFrom: Refuse |
Phoebe Wang thinks about power and her position of power from the perspective of mentorship within the Asian-Canadian writing community. | Phoebe Wang | 8 | 2018 | $0.80 Add |
From Dis Place– The Space BetweenFrom: Blank |
- | M. NoubeSe Philip | 38 | 2017 | $3.80 Add |
From In the "New CanLit," We Must all Be AntigonesFrom: Refuse |
In her essay, A. H. Reaume draws on the work of activists like Jael Richardson, Alicia Elliott, and Carrianne Leung,who argue that we must resist the desire to push past critique into optimism. … | A. H. Reaume | 8 | 2018 | $0.80 Add |
From NEW! Wolves in Trains |
- | Jonathan Ball | 3 | 2020 | $0.30 Add |
From NEW! Aleya 5 |
- | Jonathan Ball | 2 | 2020 | $0.20 Add |
From Refusing the Borders of CanLitFrom: Refuse |
Through the setting of the university, literature scholar Jennifer Andrews asks what the relationship is between the study of Canadian literature within the university and the industry called CanLit. | Jennifer Andrews | 12 | 2018 | $1.20 Add |
From Riding the Bus with Rosa in MoroccoFrom: Blank |
- | M. NoubeSe Philip | 16 | 2017 | $1.60 Add |
From RuminationsFrom: Blank |
- | M. NoubeSe Philip | 12 | 2017 | $1.20 Add |
From NEW! The Lightning of Possible Storms |
- | Jonathan Ball | 8 | 2020 | $0.80 Add |
From Whose CanLitSolidarity and Accountability in Literary Communities From: Refuse |
The university as an institution is central to writers and activists Kristen Darch and Fazeela Jiwa’s conversation, as they think through the UBCAccountable controversy as an event that can … | Fazeela Jiwa; Kirsten Darch | 7 | 2018 | $0.70 Add |
From NEW! About the Author |
- | Jonathan Ball | 3 | 2020 | $0.30 Add |
From Hearing the Artificial ObviousMargaret Atwood, UBCAccountable, and the Power of Listening From: Refuse |
Community — its possibilities and its limitations — is also central to Erika Thorkelson’s essay, as she thinks about how and why we fail to communicate across divides of status … | Erika Thorkelson | 7 | 2018 | $0.70 Add |
From Nasrin and NourbeSeFrom: Blank |
- | M. NoubeSe Philip | 27 | 2017 | $2.70 Add |