When Canadian Literature Moved To New York

Nick Mount author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Toronto Press

Published:16th Nov '06

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

When Canadian Literature Moved To New York cover

Canadian literature was born in New York City. It began not in the backwoods of Ontario or the salt flats of New Brunswick, but in the cafés, publishing offices, and boarding houses of late nineteenth-century New York, where writing developed as a profession and where the groundwork for the Canadian canon was laid. So argues Nick Mount in When Canadian Literature Moved to New York.

The last decades of the nineteenth century saw an extraordinary exodus from English Canada, draining the country of half its writers and all but a few of its contemporary and future literary celebrities. Motivated by powerful obstacles to a domestic literature, most of these migrants landed in New York - by the 1890s the centre of the continental literary market - and found for the first time a large, receptive literary market and recognition from non-Canadian publishers and reviewers.

While the expatriates of the 1880s and 1890s - including Bliss Carman, Ernest Thompson Seton, and Palmer Cox - were recognized for their achievements in Canada, the domestic literature they themselves spurred into existence rekindled a nationalist imperative to distinguish Canadian writing from other literatures, especially American, and this slowly eliminated most of their work from the emerging English Canadian canon. When Canadian Literature Moved to New York is the story of these expatriate writers: who they were, why they left, what they achieved, and how they changed Canadian literary history.

"'A highly readable history...the appeal of Mount's narrative is its examination of Canadian writers who have since dropped out of literary history but who made a huge splash in the 1880s and 1890s.' Philip Marchand, Toronto Star 'The provocative title of Nick Mount's book draws attention to a historical phenomenon that students of early Canadian literature have recognized but have failed to explore to any depth: the fact that Canada and Canadians in the late nineteenth century wanted a distinctive Canadian literature but were not prepared to pay for it. [Mount is] an ideal guide to this little-known material.' W.J. Keith, Books in Canada"

  • Commended for Gabriel Roy Prize - Association for Canadian and Quebec Literature 2005 (Canada)

ISBN: 9780802094858

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm

Weight: 360g

210 pages