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Carole GERSON and Jacques MICHON (ed.)
History of the Book in Canada: Volume 3: 1918–1980
University of Toronto Press, 2007, 696 pp.
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ISBN: 0802090478
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Résumé de l'éditeur :
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The History of the Book in Canada is one of this country’s great scholarly achievements, with three volumes spanning topics from Aboriginal communication systems established prior to European contact to the arrival of multinational publishing companies. Each volume observes developments in the realms of writing, publishing, dissemination, and reading, illustrating the process of a fledgling nation coming into its own. The third and final volume sees book history and print culture through to 1980 as it was inflected by major changes of the twentieth century, including the country’s growing demographic complexity and the rise of multiculturalism.
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Crucial to creating a sense of identity during this period was the Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts, Letters and Sciences, whose report of 1951 led to the establishment of influential cultural institutions such as the Canada Council for the Arts and the National Library of Canada. Other key developments included the initiation and growth of library systems, the expansion of film, radio, and television, the burgeoning of children’s literature, enhanced opportunities for writers, the Quiet Revolution in Quebec, and the rise of Canadian studies and Canadian literature as respected fields for teaching and research. In English Canada, mainstream book publishing flourished during the 1920s, suffered severely during the Depression, went through a period of renewal and advance after the Second World War, but became imperilled by the 1970s. Small literary presses and allophone publishers, in turn, grew increasingly significant from the 1960s, a decade in which Quebec’s new cultural policies began to foster ongoing support for francophone book culture.
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In addition to following the sweeping stories of Canada’s recent book history, this third volume pays due attention to multifarious developments in print culture, including book prizes, sports writing, pulp magazines, the alternative press, Coles Notes, the international success of Harlequin, and the unprecedented influence of Les Insolences du Frère Untel, the famous cry for education reform in 1960s Quebec. Volume three of the History of the Book in Canada marks the successful completion of an extraordinary project that documents the country’s achievements for generations of scholars and readers to come.
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Carole Gerson is Professor of English at Simon Fraser University.
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Jacques Michon is a professor in the Département des lettres et communications and a Canada Research Chair in Book and Publishing History at l’Université de Sherbrooke.
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