MODERN PERIOD,
1900–60
In the early
20th century, popular poets responding to the interest in local colour depicted
French Canadian customs and dialect (W.H. Drummond,
The Habitant and Other French-Canadian Poems, 1897), the Mohawk tribe and
rituals (E.Pauline Johnson, Legends of Vancouver, 1911; Flint and Feather,
1912), and the freedom and romance of the north (Robert Service, Songs of a
Sourdough, 1907).John McCrae’s account of World War I, “In
Flanders Fields” (1915), remains Canada’s best-known poem. Slowly a reaction
against sentimental, patriotic, and derivative Victorian verse set in.E.J. Pratt
created a distinctive style both in lyric poems of sea bound Newfoundland life
(Newfoundland Verse, 1923) and in the epic narratives The Titanic (1935),
Brébeuf and His Brethren (1940), and Towards the Last Spike (1952), which
through their reliance on accurate detail participate in the documentary tradition.Influenced by
Pratt, Earle Birney, another innovative and experimental poet, published the
frequently anthologized tragic narrative “David” (1942), the first of many
audacious, technically varied poems exploring the troubling nature of humanity
and the cosmos. His publications include the verse play Trial of a City and
Other Verse (1952) and poetic collections such as Rag & Bone Shop (1971)
and Ghost in the Wheels (1977).
Toronto’s
Canadian Forum (founded in 1920), which Birney edited from 1936 to 1940, and
Montreal’s McGill Fortnightly Review (1925–27) provided an outlet for the “new
poetry” and the emergence of Modernism.Here and in
their anthology New Provinces (1936), A.J.M. Smith, F.R. Scott, and A.M. Klein
began their long literary careers. Emphasizing concrete images, open language,
and free verse, these modernists felt that the poet’s task was to identify,
name, and take possession of the land.Klein wrote in
“Portrait of the Poet as Landscape” (1948) that the poet is “the nth Adam
taking a green inventory / in a world but scarcely uttered, naming, praising.”
The bonds of a colonial frame of mind characterized by fear of the unknown,
reliance on convention, a puritan consciousness—what Frye, in the “Conclusion”
written for the first edition of the Literary History of Canada (1965), called
the “garrison mentality”—were being broken and cast off.Strong reaction
to the Great Depression, the rise of fascism, and World War II dominated the
poems of the 1930s and ’40s. Using the documentary mode, Dorothy Livesay
condemned the exploitation of workers in Day and Night (1944), while her lyric
poems spoke frankly of sexual love (Signpost, 1932).In opposition
to the cosmopolitan and metaphysical verse promoted by Smith and the literary
magazine Preview (1942–45), Irving Layton, Louis Dudek, and Raymond
Souster—through their little magazine Contact (1952–54) and their publishing
house, the Contact Press (1952–67)—urged poets to focus on realism and the
local North American context.
P.K. Page, one
of Canada’s most intellectually rigorous poets, was associated with the Preview
group in the ’40s when she published her first collection, As Ten as Twenty
(1946), which includes the evocative renowned poem “Stories of Snow.” Page’s
later work increasingly reflected her interest in esoteric places, forms, and
religions, from Sufism (Evening Dance of the Grey Flies, 1981) to the glosa, a
Spanish poetic form (Hologram: A Book of Glosas, 1994).By 1900 novels
of local colour were beginning to overshadow historical romances. Lucy Maud
Montgomery’s beloved children’s book Anne of Green Gables (1908) and its
sequels were set in Prince Edward Island. Ontario towns and their “garrison
mentality” provided the setting for
Sara Jeannette Duncan’s portrayalof political
life in The Imperialist (1904) ,Ralph Connor’s The Man from Glengarry(1901),Stephen
Leacock’s satiric storiesSunshine
Sketches of a Little Town (1912),and Mazo de la
Roche’s best-selling Jalna series(1927–60).Out of the
Prairies emerged the novel of social realism, which documented the small, often
narrow-minded farming communities pitted against an implacable nature. Martha
Ostenso’s Wild Geese (1925), a tale of a strong young girl in thrall to her
cruel father, and Frederick Philip Grove’s Settlers of the Marsh (1925) and
Fruits of the Earth (1933), depicting man’s struggle for mastery of himself and
his land, are moving testaments to the courage of farmers.Painter Emily
Carr wrote stories about her childhood and her visits to First Nations sites in
British Columbia (Klee Wyck, 1941)
A tentativeness
in form and subject matter pervades the novels published during the 1940s and
’50s and is reflected in their protagonists, most of whom are sensitive,
restless children or artists. In this category fall the Prairie novels As for
Me and My House (1941) by Sinclair Ross, Who Has Seen the Wind(1947) by W.O.
Mitchell, and The Mountain and the Valley (1952) by Ernest Buckler, set in Nova
Scotia’s Annapolis valley.These novels
strain the bonds of conventional narrative structures as they shift from social
realism toward lyricism. In the panoramic Two Solitudes (1945) and The Watch
That Ends the Night (1959), framed against the backdrop of the two world wars,
Hugh MacLennan attempted to capture moral, social, and religious conflicts that
rent individuals, families, and the French and English communities in Quebec.Sheila Watson’s
enigmatic and mythic The Double Hook (1959) and Ethel Wilson’s Swamp Angel
(1954), about a Vancouver housewife’s bid for personal freedom, present quest
journeys against the striking backdrop of British Columbia’s interior.
Elizabeth Smart’s incantatory novel By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and
Wept (1945) is a frank and poetic account of obsessive love.
For more ,Refer:
https://www.amazon.in/Beyond-Island-J-Anantha-Krishnan/dp/8194188091
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