Papers by Roxanne Rimstead
Within Canada the poor are often portrayed as external "others"as poverty is imagined as somethin... more Within Canada the poor are often portrayed as external "others"as poverty is imagined as something that largely happens elsewhere. The poor are made invisible in the national imagination because, as Roxanne Rimstead argues in Remnants of Nation: On Poverty Narratives by
Canadian Women In Print, 1750–1918 (review)
Tulsa studies in women's literature, 2011
Fictions of poverty : reading class, gender, and nation in Canadian women's narratives
Cautiously Hopeful: Metafeminist Practices in Canada by Marie Carrière
Tulsa studies in women's literature, Mar 1, 2022
6. ‘Organized Forgetting’
Appendix: Outlawing Boundaries
Canadian Literature, 2002
In the end, she said, we had the better of them, because we washed their dirty linen and therefor... more In the end, she said, we had the better of them, because we washed their dirty linen and therefore we knew a good deal about them; but they did not wash ours, and knew nothing about us at all. (Alias Grace 189) She "sits on a cushion and sews a fine seam," cool as a cucumber and with her mouth primmed up like a governess's, and I lean my elbows on the table across from her, cudgelling my brains, and trying in vain to open her up like an oyster.
4. Theories and Anti-Theory: On Knowing Poor Women
University of Toronto Press eBooks, Jan 31, 2001
Introduction: Disturbing Images
University of Toronto Press eBooks, Jan 31, 2001
8. The Long View: Contexts of Oppositional Criticism
University of Toronto Press eBooks, Jan 31, 2001
“Knowable Communities” in Canadian Criticism
Review: Literature And Arts Of The Americas, May 1, 2008
... 8 Anthony P. Cohen, The Symbolic Construction of Community (1985; New York, London: Routledge... more ... 8 Anthony P. Cohen, The Symbolic Construction of Community (1985; New York, London: Routledge ... Politics and the Question of Identity. In John Rachman, ed., The Identity in Question ... le roman canadien (1969) and Ben-Zion Shek, Social Realism in Quebec Literature (1976). ...
Yearbook of English studies, 2004
Within Canada the poor are often portrayed as external "others"as poverty is imagined as somethin... more Within Canada the poor are often portrayed as external "others"as poverty is imagined as something that largely happens elsewhere. The poor are made invisible in the national imagination because, as Roxanne Rimstead argues in Remnants of Nation: On Poverty Narratives by
1. ‘Fictioning’ a Literature
University of Toronto Press eBooks, Jan 31, 2001
2. Visits and Homecomings
University of Toronto Press eBooks, Jan 31, 2001
3. ‘We Live in a Rickety House’: Social Boundaries and Poor Housing
Remnants of Nation, 2001
Conclusion: Taking a Position
Remnants of Nation, 2001
5. Subverting ‘Poor Me’: Negative Constructions of Identity
Canadian Women In Print, 1750–1918 (review)
Tulsa Studies in Women S Literature, 2011
Uploads
Papers by Roxanne Rimstead