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    Review of \u3ci\u3eNew Moon at Batoche: Reflections on the Urban Prairie\u3c/i\u3e By George Melnyk

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    In his latest book of cultural analysis, George Melnyk deplores the fact that although the great majority of Prairie Canadians live in urban areas, the dominant iconography of the region celebrates the land and denigrates the city. Melnyk asks how such a huge number of people (more than seven in ten) could be excluded from the region\u27s imagination? This is only possible, he says, answering his own question, because city life has not been associated with the region\u27s identity in any major way. Imagining the city is the role of artists and intellectuals, and in the nine essays that make up this book (only four of them directly on urban issues) Melnyk seeks to understand this gap and to present ways to bridge it. In his preface, Melnyk describes New Moon as the third part in a trilogy begun with his Radical Regionalism (1981) and continued in Beyond Alienation: Political Essays on the West (1993). While there are important links among the books, this latest title is best approached as a gathering of essays that highlight the stresses Melnyk sees in his own life in the 1990s and in the life of his culture. Melnyk struggles with his role as intellectual. He recognizes that like other writers he is displaced; yet he speaks also of a new culture arising only when the people as a whole effect the necessary social and economic changes. A similar tension between the popular and the artistic appears on the cover, which offers, despite Melnyk\u27s subtitle referring to the urban prairie, a trite image of big blue sky wedded to golden grass. The title proper is loaded with cultural assumptions the essays never quite unpack. What links Batoche, we might ask, with contemporary Prairie cities? Melnyk seems not to have worked out the connections. In his final essay, Rivers of the Mind, Melnyk makes a personal argument, including in it his woodcut called The People Are a River in the Land, an image that balances his compelling woodcut of poet Andrew Suknaski. He insists that rivers are the life-blood of Western Canadian urban life. But the essay\u27s subtitle, Praying to Water, seems to reflect the very attitude Melnyk criticizes in writers like Sharon Butala who celebrate rural life. Since Melnyk is one of Western Canada\u27s leading thinkers, these essays and their discontents deserve our close attention, for they point to issues that will continue to distress and restrict our future development

    The Figure of the Unknown Soldier: Home and War in The Fire-Dwellers

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    In the fall of 1967, Margaret Laurence took time from the novel she was struggling with to write to Al Purdy. She describes her progress: Thought I had discovered a sensational new narrative method the other evening—there was only one thing wrong with it; in practice, it proved to be unreadable. Thought of it in terms of the inner and outer going on simultaneously, side by side on the page—fine if you had a two-foot wide page and a reader with four eyes. (Lennox 57) Eventually, she found a wa..

    Margaret Laurence: Critical Reflections

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    This book highlights the accomplishments of one of Canada's most acclaimed and beloved fiction writers, Margaret Laurence. The essays in this collection explore her body of work as well as her influence on young Canadian writers today

    Canada

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