“Es gibt eine kanadische Literatur”: Belatedness and Canadian Literary Studies as Foreign Policy
When: Wednesday, November 13, 12-1pm
Who: Smaro Kamboureli
Where: JHB 719
Graduate students and faculty are asked to welcome Professor Kamboureli, Avie Bennett Chair in Canadian Literature, to the department! Here is a brief abstract:
In April 2012, the Canadian federal government “abolished” “Understanding Canada,” a program that supported Canadian Studies overseas. Rather than simply bemoaning the shutting down of this program, as did a host of literary authors, academics and even politicians, this paper argues that the function of “Understanding Canada,” especially as it pertains to the study of Canadian literature, should be best examined in the context of Canada’s cultural and foreign policies (e.g., the Massey and Symons Reports) and in light of the increased emphasis on knowledge economies. Taking a historical view of this program and seeing it as a trope in the Canadian national narrative of “self-formation,” it asks how “Understanding Canada” has instrumentalized culture and whether such a policy, whose origins can be traced to the early 1970s, should still be thought as relevant in the 21st century.