Waste Heritage / Irene Baird ; edited & with an introduction by Colin Hill.
Par : Baird, Irene.
Collaborateur(s) : Hill, Colin.
Collection : Canadian Literature. Éditeur : Ottawa : University of Ottawa Press, 2007Description :291 p. : cov. ill. ; 21 cm.ISBN : 9780776606491 (pbk).Sujet(s) : Labor disputes -- British Columbia -- Fiction | Nineteen thirties -- Fiction | British Columbia -- FictionRessources en ligne : Publisher's Website. | Check the UO Library catalog.Type de document | Site actuel | Collection | Cote | Numéro de copie | Statut | Date d'échéance | Code à barres |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livres | CR Julien-Couture RC (Learning) Fiction | Fiction | REA BAI 3 (Parcourir l'étagère) | 1 | Disponible | A027692 |
Parcourir CR Julien-Couture RC (Learning) Étagères , Localisation: Fiction , Code de collection: Fiction Fermer l'étagère
REA ALL 3 This Time a Better Earth / | REA ALL 3 They Have Bodies : | REA BAI 3 The Phantom of the Opera / | REA BAI 3 Waste Heritage / | REA BAR 2 Amistad : | REA BIL 1 Skiing the Impossible / | REA BRE 3 Eagle in the Snow / |
"Earlier editions ... published by Macmillan of Canada and Random House of New York in 1939."--Back flap.
Also available in electronic format.
Includes bibliographical references.
"A new critical edition of the acknowledged best Canadian novel of the 1930s. Irene Baird’s Waste Heritage is a groundbreaking work of Canadian fiction based on the dramatic and violent labour disputes that took place in British Columbia in 1938. The story follows the progress of two friends, Matt Striker, a 23-year-old from Saskatchewan, and his simple-minded companion Eddy, as they travel from Vancouver to Victoria following the occupation of the Vancouver Post Office. Like the unemployed masses that took siege of the Post Office, Matt and Eddy yearn for relief after years of economic depression. Empathetic and tragic, Waste Heritage has been praised as Canada’s Grapes of Wrath and the most important Canadian novel of the 1930s.
A new critical apparatus surrounds Baird’s original text, informing the reader of the historical and literary contexts of the work, as well as providing exhaustive textual analysis." (Publisher's Website)
CONTENTS:
Acknowledgements
Critical Introduction
Irene Baird and Waste Heritage
Critical Reception and Significance
A Textual History
Works Cited
Waste Heritage
Part One: Aschelon
Part Two: Transit
Part Three: Gath
Part Four: Transit
Explanatory Notes Textual Notes
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