Browsing Canada and Beyond -- Vol. 06 (2017) by Issue Date
Now showing items 1-8 of 8
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In the Rhythm of Cree Samba: transculturality and decolonization in Tomson Highway´s Theatre
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)The voice that comes from Indigenous artists, writers and activists in the Americas, in artistic works which can be related to Mary Louise Pratt’s concept of autoethnographic expression (1992), inevitably engages with ... -
Introduction. Canada, Brazil, and Beyond: extending the dialogue
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)The history of relations between Canada and Brazil has been erratic, full of stops and starts, “advances and setbacks” (Hewitt and Gomes, this issue) and often marred by misunderstandings, business rivalries, and the very ... -
Representations of Home in Obasan and Nihonjin: The Issei, Nisei, Sansei of Canada and Brazil
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)Joy Kogawa’s Obasan (1981) and Oscar Nakasato’s Nihonjin (2011) are two novels that narrate the lives of Japanese diaspora in Canada and Brazil respectively. Both countries share a rich tradition of Japanese migration ... -
Bahai Cuisine and Other Delicacies: Canadian-Brazilian Cultural Encounters and the Invisible Neighbour
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)Although activities like travel and translation are supposed to expand one’s cultural horizons, it is widely accepted that one is not always able to escape the imprint of one’s own society. Perhaps more critical, in the ... -
“Matando o Desconhecimento”: The Role of Culture in Brazil’s Relations with Canada and Beyond
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)In recent years, observers in both Canada and Brazil have pointed to the benefits of further developing relations between the two countries. Despite diplomatic efforts to promote productive interchange however, levels of ... -
Another piece of reassuring plastic: 8 notes on what the noigandres group taught me
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017) -
"It’s some cannibal thing": Canada and Brazil in Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy
(Universidad de Huelva, 2017)Brazilian modernist Oswald de Andrade’s artistic and philosophical manifesto of Brazilian cannibalism best enables readers to grasp Canadian author Margaret Atwood’s trilogy MaddAddam, in terms of its treatment of settler ...