1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910456321103321

Autore

Stouck David <1940->

Titolo

Ethel Wilson : a critical biography / / David Stouck

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Toronto, [Ontario] ; ; Buffalo, [New York] ; ; London, [England] : , : University of Toronto Press, , 2003

©2003

ISBN

1-281-99657-2

9786611996574

1-4426-7464-4

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (396 p.)

Disciplina

813/.52

Soggetti

Novelists, Canadian - 20th century

Women and literature - Canada - History - 20th century

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter One: CHILD -- Chapter Two: ORPHAN -- Chapter Three: PUPIL -- Chapter Four: TEACHER -- Chapter Five: WIFE -- Chapter Six: APPRENTICE -- Chapter Seven: THE INNOCENT TRAVELLER -- Chapter Eight: HETTY DORVAL -- Chapter Nine: THE EQUATIONS OF LOVE -- Chapter Ten: DOYENNE -- Chapter Eleven: SWAMP ANGEL -- Chapter Twelve: LOVE AND SALT WATER -- Chapter Thirteen: MRS GOLIGHTLY -- Chapter Fourteen: GRANDE DAME -- Chapter Fifteen: WIDOW -- Appendix: Edge-Malkin Genealogy -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Illustration Credits -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

When Ethel Wilson published her first novel, Hetty Dorval, she was in her sixtieth year. With her subsequent books, among them the widely read Swamp Angel (1954), she established herself as one of Canada's most important writers. Although she fostered a reputation for being an unambitious latecomer, a happily married doctor's wife who wrote for her own pleasure, she in fact took her writing very seriously, trying for several years to place her work with major American publishers.David Stouck's engaging biography of this elusive Canadian writer



draws on archival material and interviews to describe, in detail, her early life as an orphan in England and Vancouver and her long writer's apprenticeship, spanning from the publication of some children's stories in 1919 to the appearance of Hetty Dorval in 1947. Stouck's narrative charts the resistance among publishers, critics, and readers to the curious mixture in her work of an Edwardian sensibility and a postmodern intelligence. He also documents her own resistance to both literary nationalism and creative writing classes as strategies for promoting literature. She was nevertheless one of the few Canadian women writers to emerge from the 1950s, and she is still being read ? all her books remaining in print. Stouck observes that Wilson's writing is marked by epistemological and ethical uncertainties that are rooted in the contingencies of language, because, as Wilson herself liked to "e from Lewis Carroll, the 'meaning [of words] depends on who is the master.' Ethel Wilson: A Critical Biography is the story of a distinguished writer whose works are rightly considered classics of Canadian literature.