The Canadian Modernists Meet is a collection of new critical essays on
major and rediscovered Canadian writers of the early to mid-twentieth
century. F.R. Scott's well-known poem 'The Canadian Authors Meet' sets
the theme for the volume: a revisiting of English Canada's formative
movements in modernist poetry, fiction, and drama. As did Scott's poem,
Dean Irvine's collection raises questions - about modernism and
antimodernism, nationalism and antinationalism, gender and class,
originality and influence - that remain central to contemporary research
on early to mid-twentieth-century English Canadian literature.
The Canadian Modernists Meetis the first collection of its kind: a
gathering of texts by literary critics, textual editors, biographers,
literary historians, and art historians whose collective research
contributes to the study of modernism in Canada. The collection stages a
major reassessment of the origins and development of modernist
literature in Canada, its relationship to international modernist
literature, its regional variations, its gender and class inflections,
and its connections to visual art, architecture, and film. It presents a
range of scholarly perspectives, drawing upon the multidisciplinarity
that characterizes the international field of modernist studies.