Freedom from Culture presents eleven more of the polished and incisive
essays on Canadian literature and culture that have made John Metcalf a
household name in households of the better sort. His subjects range over
the dangers of state subsidy, anthologizing, the inflation of
reputations by academics desperate to invent new ancestors, and the
lunacy of affirmative action in literature. The collection also features
loving illuminations of fiction's interior workings. These essays are
required reading for anyone interested in writing in Canada.