Academic literature on the topic 'Canadian poet'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Vovk, Svetlana. "An Eminent French-Canadian Poet Emile Nélligan." USA & Canada: Economics – Politics – Culture 7 (2019): 117–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s032120680005619-4.

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Kürtösi, Katalin. "Poets of Bifurcated Tongues, or on the Plurilingualism of Canadian-Hungarian Poets." TTR : traduction, terminologie, rédaction 6, no. 2 (2007): 103–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/037153ar.

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Abstract Poets of Bifurcated Tongues, or on the plurilingualism of Canadian-Hungarian Poets — This article aims at an analysis of the plurilingualism of four poets of Hungarian origin, living in Canada: Robert Zend, George Vitéz, László Kemenes Géfin and Endre Farkas. Before examining the poems themselves, the various concepts of plurilingualism and the aspects of grouping these poems, including the code-switching strategies used in them, are reviewed. The base language and the nature of code-switching is discussed with a special emphasis on the relationship of grammatical units, intra- and intersentential switches within contexts where plurilingualism occurs. The first three poets have become bilinguals as adults: they form part of Hungarian literature as well as of Canadian writing. The last one, however, has a childhood bilingualism and is considered an English-Canadian Poet. Since they have a twofold minority status (Hungarian origins, plus writing in English in Montréal), analysis of these poets requires a special approach. The main hypothesis of the article is that, when using more than one language within the same work, the author is able to reach special effects which would be otherwise impossible. These poems, plurilingual in nature, also show that, for these authors, language is of multiple use: not only is language a tool of communication, but also the theme of some of their poems: they are often self-reflexive, making formal and semantic experimentation possible.
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Santos, Ariane Souza. "Ekphrasis in Shawna Lemay: “To make something mythical of my life”." Em Tese 10 (December 31, 2012): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/1982-0739.10.0.41-46.

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The object of analysis of this paper concerns the majority of the poems from All the God-Sized Fruit, written by the Canadian poet Shawna Lemay. The poems were built following five ekphrastic frameworks: appropriation of artistic style, process of creation, critical analysis, narrative, and dialogue. The intertwinement of these frameworks with discussions about the processes of writing and painting helps the poet to build up her identity as woman, poet and woman-poet.
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Gorjup, Branko, and Sam Solecki. "The Last Canadian Poet: An Essay on Al Purdy." Modern Language Review 97, no. 4 (2002): 954. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3738646.

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Webster, David. "Modern Missionaries: Canadian Postwar Technical Assistance Advisors in Southeast Asia." Canada, Empire, and Decolonization 20, no. 2 (2010): 86–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/044400ar.

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Postwar Canadian approaches to Asia were often in the non-governmental realm, drawing on the country’s missionary heritage. While diplomats in Ottawa worked for pro-Western states in the political realm, Canadian policies on economic development also aimed at building new states in the Canadian image. Canadians in government, transnational and non-governmental positions offered their own country as a model The international experts called together by the UN Technical Assistance Administration were central to Canadian postwar hopes and aspirations. The Administration, headed by Canadian civil servant Hugh Keenleyside, also included staff member George Cadbury, previously director of the Saskatchewan CCF government’s Economic Planning Board. It was individual Canadian technical advisers like these who offered the hands-on advice and played the crucial role in shaping policy taken by Southeast Asian states. These “modern missionaries” imagined themselves as part of a transnational community, one in which Canada could play a leadership role by being an active member of multilateral organizations. This paper examines the experience and role of postwar Canadian technical advisers in Southeast Asia, drawing on selected cases from the 1950s and 1960s. After considering the influence of the Canadian Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) on the idea of planning, it looks at F.R. Scott, the Montreal law professor and poet who served as the first UN Technical Assistance Resident Representative in Burma; Benjamin Higgins, the McGill economist who served as first financial advisor for the Indonesian National Planning Bureau; and J.T. Cawley, the Saskatchewan deputy minister of natural resources who was chief petroleum advisor to the Indonesian government.
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Coles, Don. "The Last Canadian Poet: An Essay on Al Purdy by Sam Solecki." ESC: English Studies in Canada 28, no. 3 (2002): 560–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/esc.2002.0056.

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Mello, Layssa Gabriela Almeida e. Silva. "READING AND WRITING POEMS IN ENGLISH: COLLABORATIVE PRACTICES AT A BRAZILIAN PUBLIC SCHOOL." Trabalhos em Linguística Aplicada 58, no. 3 (2019): 1331–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/010318135697715832019.

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ABSTRACT This study, presenting an experience with eighth-grade students at a Brazilian public school, in Goiânia, Goiás, shows students’ ability to collaboratively read and write poems in English. A poem was selected from the Indian-born, Canadian poet Rupi Kaur’s book The sun and her flowers (KAUR, 2017) to discuss and reflect on themes such as love and loss. Firstly, a theoretical reference on the importance of literary texts for English language teaching and the role of collaboration is presented to provide a theoretical basis for this pedagogical practice. The pre-reading, while-reading and post-reading activities are then described and the students’ written productions, based on Rupi Kaur’s poem, are also presented. Through these activities, students enhanced their lexical knowledge of the English language and their creativity, and also interacted with their colleagues to reflect on current issues.
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Haft, Adele J. "Earle Birney’s “Mappemounde”: Visualizing Poetry With Maps." Cartographic Perspectives, no. 43 (September 1, 2002): 4–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.14714/cp43.534.

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This paper is about “Mappemounde,” a beautiful but difficult poem composed in 1945 by the esteemed Canadian poet Earle Birney. While exploring the reasons for its composition, we examine the poem’s debts to Old and Middle English poetry as well as to medieval world maps known as mappaemundi, especially those made in England prior to 1400. But Birney took only so much from these maps. In search of more elusive inspirations, both cartographic and otherwise, we uncover other sources: Anglo-Saxon poems never before associated with “Mappemounde,” maps from the Age of Discovery and beyond, concealed details of Birney’s personal life. Then we trace Birney’s long-standing interest in geography and exploration to show how he used maps, especially mappaemundi, as visual metaphors for his intellectual, spiritual, and personal life.
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Gorjup, Branko. "Michael Ondaatje's reinvention of social and cultural Myths: In the Skin of a Lion." Acta Neophilologica 22 (December 15, 1989): 89–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/an.22.0.89-95.

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From the beginning of his writing career in the early sixties until the recent publication of In the Skin of a Lian (1987), the Canada of Michael Ondaatje had represented one thing: a geographical locale which he has selected as his home but which, fundamentally, had failed to engage his imagination. The fictional worlds he created in The Collected Works of Billy the Kid, Coming Through Slaughter and Running in the Family, has been located outside of Canada, each corresponding to an actual place complete with historical and geographical references. For this very reason it has been impossible - as Sam Solecki noted in his introduction to Spider Blues, »a collection of reviews and essays on Ondaatje - to place this anomalous literary presence in Canada within »specifically Canadian tradition of writing ...«, a tradition that would»include and see relationships among figures as different as Roberts, Pratt, F. R. Scott, Purdy and Atwood ...« Ondaatje's »characters, landscapes, stories and themes resist any taxonomies based on overtly Canadian thematics.« In fact, Solecki further suggested that Ondaatje, like »V. S. Naipaul, Derek Walcott and Salmon Rushdie ..., compels a rethinking of the notion of a national tradition«. Similarly, another critic from the same collection described Ondaatje's position in the context of Canadian writing as unique - a position according to which »language or audience or the identity and the role of the poet are indeterminate. «
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Gorjup, Branko. "Michael Ondaatje's reinvention of social and cultural Myths: In the Skin of a Lion." Acta Neophilologica 22 (December 15, 1989): 89–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/an.22.1.89-95.

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From the beginning of his writing career in the early sixties until the recent publication of In the Skin of a Lian (1987), the Canada of Michael Ondaatje had represented one thing: a geographical locale which he has selected as his home but which, fundamentally, had failed to engage his imagination. The fictional worlds he created in The Collected Works of Billy the Kid, Coming Through Slaughter and Running in the Family, has been located outside of Canada, each corresponding to an actual place complete with historical and geographical references. For this very reason it has been impossible - as Sam Solecki noted in his introduction to Spider Blues, »a collection of reviews and essays on Ondaatje - to place this anomalous literary presence in Canada within »specifically Canadian tradition of writing ...«, a tradition that would»include and see relationships among figures as different as Roberts, Pratt, F. R. Scott, Purdy and Atwood ...« Ondaatje's »characters, landscapes, stories and themes resist any taxonomies based on overtly Canadian thematics.« In fact, Solecki further suggested that Ondaatje, like »V. S. Naipaul, Derek Walcott and Salmon Rushdie ..., compels a rethinking of the notion of a national tradition«. Similarly, another critic from the same collection described Ondaatje's position in the context of Canadian writing as unique - a position according to which »language or audience or the identity and the role of the poet are indeterminate. «
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Leduc, Natalie. "Dissensus and Poetry: The Poet as Activist in Experimental English-Canadian Poetry." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38773.

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Many of us believe that poetry, specifically activist and experimental poetry, is capable of intervening in our society, as though the right words will call people to action, give the voiceless a voice, and reorder the systems that perpetuate oppression, even if there are few examples of such instances. Nevertheless, my project looks at these very moments, when poetry alters the fabric of our real, to explore the ways these poetical interventions are, in effect, instances of what I have come to call “dissensual” poetry. Using Jacques Rancière’s concept of dissensus and the distribution of the sensible, my project investigates the ways in which dissensual poetry ruptures the distribution of the sensible—“our definite configurations of what is given as our real, as the object of our perceptions and the field of our interventions”—to look at the ways poetry actually does politics (Dissensus 156). I look at three different types of dissensual poetry: concrete poetry, sound poetry, and instapoetry. I argue that these poetic practices prompt a reordering of our society, of what is countable and unaccountable, and of how bodies, capacities, and systems operate. They allow for those whom Rancière calls the anonymous, and whom we might call the oppressed or marginalized, to become known. I argue that bpNichol’s, Judith Copithorne’s, and Steve McCaffery’s concrete poems; the Four Horsemen’s, Penn Kemp’s, and Christian Bök’s sound poems; and rupi kaur’s instapoems are examples of dissensual poetry.
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Hug, Sébastien. "Towards a Canada Post-Secondary Education Act?" Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20329.

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The transition from an industrial to a global knowledge-based economy has put universities in the spotlight of public policies as the new drivers of innovation and sustained economic growth. Consequently, societal expectations towards the academic community have changed and so has, under the influence of neo-liberal ideas, the public governance of higher education. This is particularly true in federalist systems, such as Germany, Australia and the European Union, where the roles of each government level in governing the higher education sector had to be renegotiated and clarified. In Canada, however, despite repeated recommendations by policymakers, scholars and international organisations, the respective responsibilities have not yet been clarified and, to date, there are still no mechanisms to coordinate the post-secondary education policies of the federal and provincial governments. This paper inquires into the reasons for this exception. In the academic literature, this has generally been explained in terms of Canada’s uniqueness with respect to its federalist system and the decentralized higher education sector. We attempt to go beyond this traditional federalism, state-centered approach, which is predominant in the Canadian higher education literature. Instead, based on interviews and official documents and inspired by the Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF), we shall be looking at the belief systems of the major actors in the policy process and the degree of coordination among them. Our analysis comes to the conclusion that, on the one hand, proponents of a pan-Canadian approach are divided over their fundamental beliefs regarding the compatibility of inclusiveness and excellence. Some argue that the federal government must legislate common standards to ensure equal opportunities for all Canadians. Others propose a New Governance-inspired approach to create a differentiated and competitive university sector that meets the demands of the global knowledge-based economy more efficiently. On the other hand, even though the provinces differ in their beliefs regarding the equal opportunity versus economic efficiency debate, they share the same strong belief with respect to the role of the federal government. According to this view, post-secondary education is exclusively a provincial responsibility and the role of the federal government is solely to help them ‘fix the problems’. Moreover, contrary to the proponents of more intergovernmental collaboration, the provinces have successfully strengthened the coordination among themselves to block further perceived federal intrusions into provincial jurisdiction. We come to the conclusion that the absence of intergovernmental mechanisms to govern post-secondary education is a consequence of the diverging belief systems and the establishment of formal coordination structures among the provinces to block – as they perceive - further federal intrusions. Also, there is less of a sense of urgency to act compared to, say, health care. Finally, remembering the near-separation of Quebec in 1995, there is very little appetite to reopen the constitutional debates. Therefore, based on our analysis, we argue that contrary to suggestions by some higher education scholars, the establishment of intergovernmental coordinating mechanisms appears unlikely in the near future.
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Bilge, Sirma. "Communalisations ethniques post-migratoires : le cas des "Turcs" de Montréal." Paris 3, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA030109.

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Les immigrés originaires de Turquie comptent parmi les diasporas les plus étudiées à l'échelle internationale. Pourtant, ils ne semblent pas avoir fait l'objet de considérations scientifiques dans tous les contextes nationaux où ils se trouvent. À cet égard, l'état des connaissances sur les immigrés turcs et de Turquie dans l'espace nord-américain demeure largement lacunaire. Quant à leur présence au Canada, pays d'immigration s'il en fut, elle constitue un sujet inexploré. La présente thèse vise à combler cette lacune. Les questions qui la guident dépassent toutefois l'aspect purement statistique et historique de la présence turque au Canada. Outre le fait d'offrir un premier bilan sociodémographique de cette population en contexte canadien et de son histoire migratoire, cette thèse contribue à la compréhension de l'ethnicité immigrée et des forces participant à sa construction et à son organisation. Elle propose une analyse de la construction sociale de l'ethnicité et des processus au cours desquels s'organise une communauté sur une base ethnique au sein de la population immigrée de Turquie établie à Montréal, milieu urbain multiethnique caractérisé par sa "double majorité linguistique", francophone et anglophone. L'analyse se déploie à partir d'une problématisation centrale de la notion de "communauté ethnique" qu'elle propose d'appréhender en scindant ses dimensions identitaire, organisationnelle et politique, et s'interroge spécifiquement sur les motivations sociales des immigrés originaires de Turquie à s'organiser en communauté ethnique et sur les facteurs agissant de façon incitative ou dissuasive sur ces processus. Une des conclusions majeures a trait à la multiplicité et à l'interaction des facteurs agissant sur les modes d'organisation et de représentation collectives observés dans ce milieu immigré spécifique. Les facteurs identifiés tombent dans l'une des trois catégories de relations sociales posées comme centrales à la construction et à l'organisation de l'ethnicité immigrée, à savoir les rapports intracommunautaires, les rapports interminoritaires et les rapports majoritaires/minoritaires<br>Migrants from Turkey are among the most studied diasporas in the world. Nonetheless they do not seem to have caught the attention of social scientists in every national context in which they are present. For instance, Turkish immigration in North-America is barely documented, even less so studied. In Canada, this subject has simply remained unexplored. The present thesis is intended to fill this gap. Yet, questions central to this research cannot be confined to statistical or historical aspects of migration from Turkey in Canada. In addition to providing the first socio-demographic survey of this population and its migratory history in Canada, this study aims at fostering a better understanding of migrant ethnicity and of factors contributing to its construction and organization in an urban setting - in this case Montreal, a multiethnic metropolis caracterized by its "double linguistic majority", Francophone and Anglophone. Those factors might be structural, conjonctural, related to society of origin as well as to that of settlement. Rather than taking the notion of "ethnic community" for granted, the analysis depicts the concept by distinguishing three distinct pillars: collective identity, group organization and political action. It then examines the social motivations of migrants from Turkey to organize themselves into an ethnic community, as well as the factors acting upon these processes in an encouraging or discouraging way. A major conclusion relates to the multiplicity and interaction of factors influencing modes of collective organization and representation observed among this specific immigrant population. Factors that have been identified belong to one of the three categories of social relationships central to the construction and organisation of migrant ethnicity in this milieu, i. E. Intracommunal relations, interminority relations and majority/minority relations
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Holmgren, Michele J. "Native muses and national poetry, nineteenth-century Irish-Canadian poets." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/nq28493.pdf.

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Ganz, Shoshannah. "Canadian literary pilgrimage: From colony to post-nation." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/29292.

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This thesis establishes the presence of pilgrimage in Canadian literature as reflective of Canadian cultural and global changes. It shows the enduring archetypal characteristics of pilgrimage from the earliest pre-Confederation travel writing to contemporary and postmodern novels. The topic of Canadian literary pilgrimage allows for an eclectic and necessarily multi-disciplinary approach and also for the study of the earliest Canadian letters and contemporary novelists, as well as for a breadth of forms, including journals, letters, archival sermons, dramatic works, poetry, and contemporary Canadian novels. Chapter one begins with the cultural figure of Brebeuf as pilgrim first in The Jesuit Relations (1632-1673), proceeds to E. J. Pratt's long-poem Brebeuf and his Brethren (1940), on-site research at the memorial to Brebeuf in Midland, Ontario, and concludes with the post-colonial revisiting of this figure in James W. Nichol's dramatic work, Saint-Marie Among the Hurons (1980), and in Brian Moore's Black Robe (1985). Chapter two turns to Oliver Goldsmith's The Rising Village and explores Protestant pilgrimage, marking the material and spiritual progress of that pilgrimage. The thesis then looks at Goldsmith's work in conjunction with the influential sermons and journals of Bishop John Inglis of Nova Scotia. Chapter three follows pilgrimage into more contemporary works in Robertson Davies' Fifth Business and Jane Urquhart's The Stone Carvers, incorporating post-structuralist discussions of the nomad as pilgrim or anti-pilgrim figure and the implications of homelessness to the pilgrimage paradigm. Chapters four and five analyze Richard B. Wright's The Age of Longing and Clara Callan, and Timothy Findley's The Butterfly Plague and Headhunter, which are explored in light of some of Jacques Derrida's writing and the critical utopian studies of Ernst Bloch.
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Iuliano, Susanna. "Sebben che siamo donne (although we are women) : a comparative study of Italian immigrant women in post-war Canada and Australia." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38537.

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Understanding the lives of Italian women who migrated to Canada and Australia in the post-war period is the goal of this thesis. Although governments assigned women secondary roles as dependants and 'followers' in the migration process, I argue that Italian women were central, not marginal, to the migration and settlement experiences of Italian immigrants. By placing Italian women front and centre of this study, I contribute to a small but growing body of work that challenges the male-centred perspective of most literature on Italian-Canadian and Italian-Australian migration and ethnicity.<br>This thesis is structured within a feminist framework and uses interdisciplinary methods to gather and interpret quantitative and qualitative information about the lives of Italian immigrant women in post-war Canada and Australia. Using government and church archives, personal interviews, ethnic newspapers, legal documents, marriage registers and participant observer fieldwork, I explore three major themes.<br>Firstly, I examine Italian immigrant women's understanding of power relations within their homes and workplaces. Rather than cast women as either passive victims or all-conquering heroines, I present the complexity of the sources of power and weakness in immigrant women's lives. I argue that Italian immigrant women had to cope with exploitation and disadvantage because of their class, gender and ethnic status. However, they responded to these challenges with resistance and resilience, and were able to affect change and wield power within certain constraints.<br>Secondly, I compare the experiences of migration and settlement for Italian immigrant women in Canada and Australia and show how women's experiences were united by common gender concerns. I found overwhelming similarities between the family lives and work experiences of Italian-Canadian and Italian-Australian immigrant women, and in the government policies and programs that attempted to direct their migration and settlement in the post-war period.<br>Finally, I examine how Italian immigrant women helped to construct what it means to be 'Italian' in post-war Canada and Australia. I show how gender roles assigned to, and chosen by, Italian-Canadian and Italian-Australian women, served as boundary markers for ethnic difference. Perceived differences in attitudes towards waged work, mothering, family responsibilities and sexuality were used by Italian immigrant women to distinguish themselves as members of an ethnic collective.
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Benscoter, Brian William. "Post-fire compositional and functional recovery of western Canadian bogs /." Available to subscribers only, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1456284501&sid=4&Fmt=2&clientId=1509&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Edin, Kristian. "Canadian natives from a post-colonial perspective in history textbooks." Thesis, Malmö högskola, Lärarutbildningen (LUT), 2007. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-35082.

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Syftet med denna uppsats är att undersöka beskrivningen av kanadensiska urinvånare i kanadensiska historieläroböcker, från ett postkolonialt perspektiv,för att se om de innehåller någon form av fördomar. Med en kvalitativ metod,och i jämförelse med tidigare genomförda studier inom samma område, analyseras fyra kanadensiska historieläroböcker för gymnasinivå. mina sammanfattningar visar att läroböcker är mindre fördomsfulla idag än för tjugo år sedan, men från ett postkolonialt teoretiskt perpsektiv innehåller de fortfarande tendenser av en världsuppfattning som stammar från kolonialt tänkande.<br>The aim of this study is to examine the portrayal of Canadian Natives in Canadian history textbooks, through a postcolonial theory, to see if they contain bias or prejudices. With a qualitative method, and in comparison to previously conducted studies of textbook bias, four Canadian high-school history textbooks are analyzed. My conclusions show that textbooks are less bias than twenty years ago, but that they from a postcolonial theory perspective still carry tendencies of colonial conceptions.
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Conway, Shannon. "National Project, Regional Perspective: Newfoundland, Canada and Identities, 1949-1991." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40996.

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The Canadian government has long striven for an official national identity grounded in a cohesive sense of national unity, but this has been in contrast to the regional reality of the Canadian state. The postwar period reveals increased concern within Canada regarding its national identity, when the federal government was attempting to construct an intrinsic identity and trying to encode what it meant to be Canadian. When Newfoundland joined Canada in 1949, it became an additional element in this enduring struggle. After confederation, a cultural revival in the province further entrenched its distinct identity during the same period in which it was acclimatizing to a new Canadian reality. The main goals of this research are to comprehend how Newfoundland understood official Canadian identity in its post-confederation period and how the province pursued a distinct identity while becoming a part of Canada. This project examines how Newfoundland understood official constructions of Canadian identity during the post-1949 period to observe how Canada’s official national identity was understood outside of the dominant central-Canada perspective. This alternative regional perspective provides an understanding of how the realities of Canada’s regionalism play a role in why the official national identity was not as homogenous or uniting as the federal government had idealized. By addressing the national question of Canadian identity through a regional Newfoundland perspective, this project seeks to deepen and expand our knowledge and understanding of modern Canada and its continued regional realities.
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Venne, Janique. "L'Accord définitif Nisga'a: Un modèle d'autonomie gouvernementale post-colonial?" Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26408.

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Cette thèse évalue la portée de l'Accord définitif Nisga'a en tant que repère dans le développement de l'autodétermination autochtone au Canada. Par une étude détaillée des paramètres du modèle d'autonomie gouvernementale nisga'a, un examen des potentialités de cet accord en matière de troisième niveau de gouvernement destiné à répondre aux préoccupations des Premières nations est réalisé. L'auteure soutient que l'Accord définitif Nisga'a établit un troisième niveau de gouvernement autochtone dans la fédération canadienne sans toutefois remettre en question les fondements historiques à la base de celle-ci, de même que la politique traditionnelle du gouvernement fédéral en matière d'autonomie gouvernementale.
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Books on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Jankola, Beth. Drawings by poet. Broken Jaw Press, 1989.

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B, Greenshields E. A forgotten poet. s.n., 1997.

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McKenzie, Ruth. Wilfred Campbell, Ottawa poet. Historical Society of Ottawa, 1985.

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Pitt, David G. Towards the first spike: The evolution of a poet. Division of University Relations, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1987.

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Lyons, J. B. William Henry Drummond: Poet in patois. Associated Medical Services, 1994.

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Solecki, Sam. The last Canadian poet: An essay on Al Purdy. University of Toronto Press, 1999.

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Billingham, Susan E. Language and the sacred in Canadian poet bpNichol's the Martyrology. E. Mellen Press, 2000.

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Molson, Daphne Jane Rogers. Madame Daphne Molson: A portrait of a Canadian international acclaimed poet laureate. D.J.R. Molson, 2005.

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Remembering John McCrae: Soldier, doctor, poet. Scholastic Canada, 2009.

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1926-, Spickett Ronald, and Nickle Arts Museum, eds. Spirit matters: Ron (Gyo-Zo) Spickett, artist, poet, lay-priest. University of Calgary Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Perczel, István. "Alexander of the Port/Kadavil Chandy Kattanar: A Syriac Poet and Disciple of the Jesuits in Seventeenth Century India." In Journal of the Canadian Society for Syriac Studies 14, edited by Amir Harrak. Gorgias Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463236618-003.

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Wisker, Gina. "Canadian Women’s Writing." In Post-Colonial and African American Women’s Writing. Macmillan Education UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-333-98524-3_11.

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Bialystok, Frank. "7. Post-War Canadian Jewry." In Canada's Jews, edited by Ira Robinson. Academic Studies Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781618110275-008.

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Benson, Eugene. "Canada." In Post-Colonial English Drama. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22436-4_5.

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Sénécal, Michel, and Éric George. "Canadian Communication Policies in the Post-Netflix Era." In The Values of Public Service Media in the Internet Society. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56466-7_9.

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Cosgrove, Kenneth M. "Andrew Scheer and the Post-Harper Conservative Party: Materialist, Post-Materialist and Negative Branding." In Political Marketing in the 2019 Canadian Federal Election. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50281-2_3.

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Vineberg, Robert. "Post-Confederation Settlement Activities to 1945." In Responding to Immigrants' Settlement Needs: The Canadian Experience. Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2688-8_2.

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Laville, Christian. "Canada." In The Palgrave Handbook of Conflict and History Education in the Post-Cold War Era. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05722-0_10.

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Doran, Charles F., and David Pratt. "1. The Need for a Canadian Grand Strategy." In Canada's National Security in the Post-9/11 World. University of Toronto Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442686878-005.

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Brock, Sebastian. "THE DISPUTE POEM: FROM SUMER TO SYRIAC." In Journal of the Canadian Society for Syriac Studies 1, edited by Amir Harrak. Gorgias Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463216214-002.

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Conference papers on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Koroll, G. W., M. A. Ryz, J. W. Harding, W. R. Ridgway, M. J. Rhodes, and R. H. McCamis. "Decommissioning AECL Whiteshell Laboratories." In ASME 2003 9th International Conference on Radioactive Waste Management and Environmental Remediation. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2003-4955.

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AECL operates two nuclear R&amp;D laboratories in Canada, Chalk River Laboratories (CRL) near Ottawa, Ontario, and Whiteshell Laboratories (WL), near Winnipeg, Manitoba. Whiteshell Laboratories have been in operation since about 1965. R&amp;D programs carried out at WL included the WR-1 research reactor, which operated from 1965 to 1985, reactor safety research, small reactor development, materials science, post irradiation examination, chemistry, biophysics and radiation applications. The Canadian Nuclear Fuel Waste Management Program was conducted and continues to operate at WL and also at the nearby Underground Research Laboratory. In the late-1990s, AECL began to consolidate research and development activities at CRL and initiated preparations for decommissioning WL. Preparations for decommissioning included a formal environmental assessment under Canadian environmental assessment legislation, a prerequisite to AECL’s application for a decommissioning licence. In 2002 December, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission issued a decommissioning licence for WL, valid until December 31, 2008. The licence authorizes the first planned phase of site decommissioning as well as the continuation of selected research programs. The six-year licence for Whiteshell Laboratories is the first overall decommissioning license issued for a Canadian Nuclear Research and Test Establishment and is the longest licence term ever granted for a nuclear installation of this complexity in Canada. The first phase of decommissioning is now underway and focuses on decontamination and modifications to nuclear facilities, such as the shielded facilities, the main R&amp;D laboratories and the associated service systems, to achieve a safe state of storage-with-surveillance. Later phases have planned waste management improvements for selected wastes already in storage, eventually followed by final decommissioning of facilities and infrastructure and removal of most wastes from the site. This paper provides an overview of the planning, environmental assessment, licensing, and organizational processes for decommissioning and selected descriptions of decommissioning activities currently underway at AECL Whiteshell Laboratories.
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Rao, Y. F., Z. Cheng, G. M. Waddington, and A. Nava-Dominguez. "ASSERT-PV 3.2: Improved Subchannel Thermalhydraulics Code for CANDU Fuel Bundles." In 2013 21st International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icone21-15289.

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Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) has developed the subchannel thermalhydraulics code ASSERT-PV for the Canadian nuclear industry. The most recent release version, ASSERT-PV 3.2 has enhanced phenomenon models for improved predictions of flow distribution, dryout power and CHF location, and post-dryout (PDO) sheath temperature in horizontal CANDU fuel bundles. The focus of the improvements is mainly on modelling considerations for the unique features of CANDU bundles such as horizontal flows, small pitch to diameter ratios, high mass fluxes, and mixed and irregular subchannel geometries, compared to PWR/BWR fuel assemblies. This paper describes the model changes or additions in the new version to improve predictions of flow distribution, dryout power and CHF location, and PDO sheath temperature.
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Banerjee, Satindranath, and Jalal Kawash. "Re-thinking computer literacy in post-secondary education." In the 14th Western Canadian Conference. ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1536274.1536282.

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Khmelevsky, Youry. "Research and teaching strategies integration at post-secondary programs." In the 16th Western Canadian Conference. ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1989622.1989638.

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Reynolds, M. M., and J. C. Shaw. "Optimizing Hydraulic Fracturing Treatments for CBM Production Using Data From Post-Frac Analysis." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2005-213.

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Liao, S., F. Brunner, and L. Mattar. "Impact of Ignoring CO2 Injection Volumes on Post-Frac PTA." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2009-124.

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Zeng, F., K. D. Knorr, and R. Wilton. "Post-Cold Production Solvent Vapor Extraction (SVX) Process Performance Evaluation by Numerical Simulation." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2008-033.

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Kantzas, A., and G. Brook. "Preliminary Laboratory Evaluation of Cold and Post-Cold Production Methods for Heavy Oil Reservoirs." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2002-079.

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Salim, K., S. O. Osisanya, and Y. Madi. "Post-Drilling Analysis of Underbalanced Drilled Wells in Hassi-Messaoud Field, Algeria-Case Studies." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2004-029.

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McCauley, Dave, Douglas Metcalfe, Marcia Blanchette, and Tom Calvert. "The Government of Canada’s Programs for Radioactive Waste Cleanup and Long-Term Management." In ASME 2009 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2009-16133.

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The Government of Canada’s 1996 Policy Framework for Radioactive Waste Management establishes that waste owners are responsible for the management of their radioactive wastes. This includes the planning, funding, and implementation of long-term waste management initiatives. Within this context, the Government has established three separate programs aimed at addressing the long-term management of radioactive waste for which it has accepted responsibility. The largest of these programs is the Nuclear Legacy Liabilities Program (NLLP). The objective of the NLLP is to address radioactive waste and decommissioning liabilities resulting from 60 years of nuclear research and development at Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) sites in Canada. In 2005, the Government increased the value of this liability in its Public Accounts based on a new, 70-year long-term strategy and, in 2006, it implemented a $520 million 5-year work plan to initiate the strategy. The cost of implementing the full strategy is estimated at about $7 billion (current-day dollars). Canada’s Historic Waste Program is a second program that is designed to address low-level radioactive wastes across Canada that are not managed in an appropriate manner for the long-term and for which the current owner can not reasonably be held responsible. These wastes mainly emanate from the refining and use of radium in the 1930s and the very early days of the nuclear industry in Canada when radioactive ores were mined and transported long distances for processing. While the Historic Waste Program has been in place since 1982, the Government of Canada launched the Port Hope Area Initiative in 2001 to deal with the bulk of the waste. Finally, the Government of Canada has entered into two agreements with Canadian provincial governments on roles and responsibilities relating to the decommissioning of uranium mine and mill tailings sites. These agreements, one with the Province of Ontario and one with the Province of Saskatchewan, establish the responsibilities of each level of government to address circumstances where further decommissioning work is required and the producer can no longer be held responsible. The paper will provide an overview of these environmental remediation programs for radioactive waste and will describe recent progress and future challenges.
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Reports on the topic "Canadian poet"

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Skone, Timothy J. Canadian Oil Sands Synthetic, Extraction and Post-processing, Operation. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1509003.

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McDonald, Nina K. United States and Canada: Post 9-11 Relationship. Defense Technical Information Center, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada415760.

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Kumarapeli, S. Seismic Zones, Ancient Fault Systems and Post-Glacial Faulting in eastern Canada. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/130316.

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Kellett, D. A., N. Piette-Lauzière, N. Mohammadi, et al. Spatio-temporal distribution of Devonian post-accretionary granitoids in the Canadian Appalachians: implications for tectonic controls on intrusion-related mineralization. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/327955.

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Hamblin, A. P., and P. J. Lee. Uppermost Cretaceous, post-Colorado Group gas resources of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin, Interior Plains. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/209072.

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Belley, Philippe, Marc Frenette, and Lance Lochner. Post-Secondary Attendance by Parental Income in the U.S. and Canada: What Role for Financial Aid Policy? National Bureau of Economic Research, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w17218.

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Hamblin, A. P. An Eocene post-kimberlite maar lake: lacustrine oil-shale crater-fill deposits, Lac de Gras area, Northwest Territories, Canada. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/296430.

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Jerzykiewicz, T. Synopsis: "Controls on the distribution of coal in the Campanian to Paleocene post-Wapaibi strata of the Rocky Mountain Foothills [Canada]". Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/126742.

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Richard, P. J. H. Patterns of Post-Wisconsinan Plant Colonization in Quebec-Labrador [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131571.

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Richard, P. J. H. Les Patrons de Colonisation Végétale Post-Wisconsinienne au Quebec-Labrador [Chapitre 7: Environnements Quaternaires au Canada Documentés par des Dossiers Paléobotaniques]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131572.

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