541 research outputs found
Twenty Years of Change: The Paradox of Italian-Canadian Writers
The most significant development which has taken place among Italian-Canadian writers since 1986 is the great amount of writing and publication. This was not supposed to happen according to most opinions. I recall that for the 1986 conference Dino Minni wanted to look at the uncertain future. Some of us had questions, or doubts, about what these authors were going to write about. Were they going to continue to talk about, and complain about the immigrant experience? So Minni made the theme of the conference “Writers in Transition,” which was a euphemism for assimilation. And I gave a paper entitled, “Nothing Left to Say.” Had Italian-Canadian writers exhausted the themes of immigration, and ethnic identity? Many of my academic friends said yes they had. Several authors agreed and planned to move on to other topics and literary problems. So it was a paradox that some of the writers used the occasion of the 1986 conference in Vancouver to found an association of writers now called the Association of Italian-Canadian Writers. This essay is a brief review of the history of AICW from 1986 to 2006
Cosmic Ear: Calabrian Writers in Canada
"Our House is in a Cosmic Ear" is the title of a poem by Antonino Mazza, a poet and translator who epitomizes Calabrian writers in Canada. Calabrians constitute a very large proportion of the Italians in Canada. There are an estimated 260,000 people of Calabrian background. Nevertheless little has been written about these people or their cultural impact on Canadian society. Calabrians in Canada are better known for their significant economic success. Many have achieved prominence in the professions. Their construction companies have changed the skylines of Toronto and Montreal. These achievements overshadow the modest endeavours of artists who are representing cultural roots and the experiences of immigration. However economic success does not always help us to understand who we are. We must turn to the artist to explore questions of identity
Friulani Writers in Canada: Elegy for the Future
One day we got lost in Pordenone. On a long drive from Udine to Bassano we took a wrong turn and found ourselves in a newly built area of Pordenone. The streets, sidewalks, green lawns and house designs were all a reproduction of a new subdivision in Toronto. We were lost, but we were back in Canada. It was a disorienting experience. These former immigrants to Canada had returned to Friuli, but had wanted to reconstruct their Toronto neighbourhood. They wanted both worlds: to live in Friuli, but in a Canadian style, and probably with Canadian dollars. What does this tell us about our relationship to landscape and to history
Problems for the Italian-Canadian Writer and Critic: A Discussion in Three Parts
Part One: The State of the Art; Part Two: Younger Writers; Part Three: The Burdens of History for the Italia
Shirt and the Happy Man: Theory and Politics in Ethnic Minority Writing
Ethnic minority writing in Canada was once a neglected field not only by Canadianists promoting a canon for a national literature, but also by theorists who focused on the great works from major European languages as the standards for explaining all the writing of the world. The recent growing interest by both groups in the works of ethnic minority writers in Canada, along with the literary awards some of these new writers have won, has created the need to review the role of theory in the re-evaluation of minority writing. This brief essay raises several questions about the relationship of high theory to ethnic minority writing. Among the topics considered are the instinctive mistrust of theory by some minority writers, the political use of theory to create a space for minority authors, postmodern ideas, intertextuality, and the use of foreign languages in English or French language texts. The issues of resistance to theory and the politics of literary production is placed in the context of the debate over the appropriation of voice, storytelling and realist traditions
Representation of Ethnicity as Problem: Essence or Construction
The reading and study of ethnic minority writing repeatedly confront the problem of
representation, and raise many questions in the debate between essentialism and social
construction and implications for the issues of appropriation of voice and agency. Using
examples from Italian-Canadian writers and other minority groups in Canada this paper explores these questions and implications referring to the critical work of Sneja Gunew, Edward Said, Francesco Loriggio, Linda Hutcheon and Frank Lentricchia
Five–Fold Translation in the Theatre of Marco Micone
In the complex relationship between the literatures of English Canada and Quebec translation has played an important role. Now with the emergence of ethnic minority writing in Canada this binary model of the literary institutions must be reformulated. The processes of translation are made even more complex by the phenomena of heritage languages and ethnic minority cultures. How are these developments represented on stage in the French theatres of Montreal
Conservation Laws in Cellular Automata
If X is a discrete abelian group and B a finite set, then a cellular
automaton (CA) is a continuous map F:B^X-->B^X that commutes with all X-shifts.
If g is a real-valued function on B, then, for any b in B^X, we define G(b) to
be the sum over all x in X of g(b_x) (if finite). We say g is `conserved' by F
if G is constant under the action of F. We characterize such `conservation
laws' in several ways, deriving both theoretical consequences and practical
tests, and provide a method for constructing all one-dimensional CA exhibiting
a given conservation law.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX 2E with one (1) Encapsulated PostScript figure. To
appear in Nonlinearity. (v2) minor changes/corrections; new references added
to bibliograph
Fermi LAT Gamma-ray Detections of Classical Novae V1369 Centauri 2013 and V5668 Sagittarii 2015
We report the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) detections of high-energy
(>100 MeV) gamma-ray emission from two recent optically bright classical novae,
V1369 Centauri 2013 and V5668 Sagittarii 2015. At early times, Fermi
target-of-opportunity observations prompted by their optical discoveries
provided enhanced LAT exposure that enabled the detections of gamma-ray onsets
beginning ~2 days after their first optical peaks. Significant gamma-ray
emission was found extending to 39-55 days after their initial LAT detections,
with systematically fainter and longer duration emission compared to previous
gamma-ray detected classical novae. These novae were distinguished by multiple
bright optical peaks that encompassed the timespans of the observed gamma rays.
The gamma-ray light curves and spectra of the two novae are presented along
with representative hadronic and leptonic models, and comparisons to other
novae detected by the LAT are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, ApJ accepte
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