Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies Journal
Canada and Beyond is a peer-reviewed open access journal founded in 2011. As the only journal specializing in Canadian literary and cultural studies in Europe, it seeks to prompt meaningful interventions in how the literatures and cultures emerging from what is currently called Canada are perceived, analyzed, and interpreted both within and beyond Canada’s borders. It also aims to place the limelight on the function of literature and criticism as transformative social forces. In the spirit of their founding editors, the Spanish Canadianists Pilar Cuder-Domínguez and Belén Martín-Lucas, the journal favors a trans-national, global outlook spanning genres and schools of literary and cultural criticism that engage political, cultural, and environmental concerns. All in all, Canada and Beyond endeavors to make a significant contribution to the humanities.
The journal is published annually by Salamanca University Press (Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca), and housed in the English Department (Departamento de Filología Inglesa), Universidad de Salamanca. It invites original manuscripts all year round.
ISSN online: 2254-1179
The journal was published by University of Huelva until vol. 9, 2020.
Supervisors: Ana María Fraile Marcos (Universidad de Salamanca) and Eva Darias Beautell (Universidad de La Laguna)
The journal is published annually by Salamanca University Press (Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca), and housed in the English Department (Departamento de Filología Inglesa), Universidad de Salamanca. It invites original manuscripts all year round.
ISSN online: 2254-1179
The journal was published by University of Huelva until vol. 9, 2020.
Supervisors: Ana María Fraile Marcos (Universidad de Salamanca) and Eva Darias Beautell (Universidad de La Laguna)
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Papers by Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies Journal
Chair at the University of Calgary, where she directs The Insurgent Architects’
House for Creative Writing. She has authored nine books. Her most recent
works are The Tiger Flu, Iron Goddess of Mercy and The Lost Century. She is a
recipient of the Jim Duggins Novelist’s Prize, the Lambda Literary Award and the
Otherwise Honor Book. She was recently awarded a Maria Zambrano Fellowship
at the University of Huelva in Spain and has been actively engaged in cultural
organizing, experimental poetry and speculative fiction communities since the
1980s. Her work often explores themes of identity intertwined with elements of
science fiction and the fantastical imagination. This interview took place in Parque
García Sanabria on 24th March 2023 during a visit of Larissa Lai to the University
of La Laguna and it focuses on the convergence of history, myth and affects, providing
a reflection on the circularity of time and the promise of happiness.
resurgence, which assert that a cultural resurgence (such as a revalorization of Indigenous ecological knowledge) cannot take place without a political resurgence (such as the acknowledgement of Indigenous sovereignty), I argue that Maracle’s portrayal of natural elements and her imagining of human-nature relations is inextricably linked to a decolonizing perspective foregrounded on Indigenous feminism.
Chair at the University of Calgary, where she directs The Insurgent Architects’
House for Creative Writing. She has authored nine books. Her most recent
works are The Tiger Flu, Iron Goddess of Mercy and The Lost Century. She is a
recipient of the Jim Duggins Novelist’s Prize, the Lambda Literary Award and the
Otherwise Honor Book. She was recently awarded a Maria Zambrano Fellowship
at the University of Huelva in Spain and has been actively engaged in cultural
organizing, experimental poetry and speculative fiction communities since the
1980s. Her work often explores themes of identity intertwined with elements of
science fiction and the fantastical imagination. This interview took place in Parque
García Sanabria on 24th March 2023 during a visit of Larissa Lai to the University
of La Laguna and it focuses on the convergence of history, myth and affects, providing
a reflection on the circularity of time and the promise of happiness.
resurgence, which assert that a cultural resurgence (such as a revalorization of Indigenous ecological knowledge) cannot take place without a political resurgence (such as the acknowledgement of Indigenous sovereignty), I argue that Maracle’s portrayal of natural elements and her imagining of human-nature relations is inextricably linked to a decolonizing perspective foregrounded on Indigenous feminism.
Call for Papers for a special issue of Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies
(https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2254-1179/index)
Issue 12, 2023
Guest editors: Stephanie Oliver and Kit Dobson