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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > English And French Canadian Literature > Canadian literature, English
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > C

Canadian literature, English, English And French Canadian Literature

Related Category: English And French Canadian Literature

The first Canadian novelist of note was John Richardson, whose Wacousta (1832) popularized the genre of the national historical novel. With The Clockmaker (1836) T. C. Haliburton began his humorous series on Sam Slick, the Yankee peddler. Historical novelists writing c.1900 included William Kirby, author of The Golden Dog (1877), and Sir Gilbert Parker, author of The Seats of the Mighty (1896). The novels of Sara Jeannette Duncan, such as A Social Departure (1890), were noted for their satire and humor. The Rev. C. W. Gordon (Ralph Connor) produced Black Rock (1898), a series of novels on pioneer life in W Canada. Animal stories became popular in the works of Ernest Thompson Seton, Sir C. G. D. Roberts, and Margaret Marshall Saunders.

Since 1900, Canadian novels have tended toward stricter realism, but have remained predominantly regional, and many writers have been women. Among the most prominent authors have been Lucy M. Montgomery, author of Anne of Green Gables (1908); Mazo de la Roche, well known for her series on the Whiteoaks family of Jalna; Frederick P. Grove, author of Settlers of the Marsh (1925), a novel of farm life; and Laura Salverson and Nellie McClung, novelists of immigrant and rural life in W Canada.

Margaret Atwood is probably the best-known modern Canadian author. Other important novelists during and after World War II include Morley Callaghan, Gwethalyn Graham, John Buell, Hugh MacLennan, Mordecai Richler, Malcolm Lowry, Ethel Wilson, Robertson Davies, Brian Moore, Margaret Laurence, Timothy Findlay, and Neil Bissoondath. Their novels have focused attention on Canadian city life, social problems, and the large problem of Canadian cultural division.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Margaret Eleanor Atwood
Morley Callaghan
Bliss Carman
Robertson Davies
Mazo de la Roche
William Henry Drummond
English literature
Northrop Frye
Thomas Chandler Haliburton
Samuel Hearne
Henry Kelsey
William Kirby
Archibald Lampman
Margaret Laurence
Stephen Butler Leacock
Malcolm Lowry
Alexander Mackenzie
Hugh MacLennan
John McCrae
Brian Moore
Sir Gilbert Parker
Marjorie Lowry Christie Pickthall
Edwin John Pratt
Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts
John Richardson
Mordecai Richler
Charles Sangster
Duncan Campbell Scott
Robert William Service
Ernest Thompson Seton



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