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Overview“Now, don’t you ever leave Newfoundland,” Premier Joey Smallwood told seventeen-year-old Sandra Djwa in 1956. But leave she did – only to return decades later as a pathbreaking literary scholar and one of Canada’s most influential female academics, carrying with her a remarkable legacy of intellectual nation-building. Part memoir and part literary history, Ground to Stand On traces a life in letters that was often ahead of its time. In a voice by turns quizzical, amused, and indignant, Djwa offers an immersive account of the struggles and achievements of the first generations of women professors in a male-dominated academy while charting the emergence of Canadian literature as a respected field of study. Along the way, she sketches incisive portraits of Margaret Atwood, Leonard Cohen, Michael Crummey, Northrop Frye, and Pierre Trudeau. Revisiting her acclaimed biographies of F.R. Scott, Roy Daniells, and P.K. Page, Djwa enriches them with fresh reflections on the art and challenges of literary biography. Scholarship on Canadian poetry and criticism does more than record: it shapes cultural belonging. Ground to Stand On is a meditation on selfhood, memory, and place, culminating in Djwa’s reckoning with ancestry and her Newfoundland sense of belonging. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sandra DjwaPublisher: McGill-Queen's University Press Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press ISBN: 9780228027706ISBN 10: 0228027705 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 19 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsFigures ∙ ix Preface ∙ xi 1 A Newfoundland Girl (1939–56) ∙ 3 2 “Up Along” to Canada (1956–62) ∙ 23 3 Getting an Education (1962–68) ∙ 44 4 “You’ve Got It All” (1968–74) ∙ 68 5 A Woman, a Canadian, and a Canadianist (1974–79) ∙ 93 6 F.R. Scott: “I’m Bio, You’re Graphy” (1975–87) ∙ 117 7 “Why Me?” (1980–90) ∙ 141 8 Roy Daniells: The Way It Was (1990–2002) ∙ 163 9 P.K. Page: Backtracking a Life (1997–2013) ∙ 187 10 A Place to Stand On (2013–24) ∙ 209 Acknowledgments ∙ 233 Notes ∙ 237 Index ∙ 255Reviews“In one generation Sandra Djwa journeys from a time when Canadian culture was constrained by a colonial cringe to a moment when Canadian writing is celebrated internationally. Djwa and her contemporaries fought hard to achieve this. As a bonus she speaks eloquently about the fascinating detective work biography entails.” – Rosemary Sullivan, author of The Betrayal of Anne Frank: A Cold Case Investigation “The birth of Canadian studies and the entry of women into academia are vital developments at the heart of this highly readable literary autobiography. An acclaimed scholar at the centre of monumental change in the world of scholarship and a highly respected biographer of unquestionably influential figures, Sandra Djwa has written her own story with both ease and sophistication.” – Hugh Johnston, Simon Fraser University “One of Canada’s pre-eminent biographers and literary historians, Sandra Djwa turns the lens on her own groundbreaking life with this immensely readable coast-to-coast memoir. It’s a front-row seat on the development of CanLit and Canadian studies, a reflection on the art and forensics of literary biography, and a testament to the energy and initiative of her generation of gutsy academic women.” – Heather Murray, University of Toronto Author InformationSandra Djwa is professor emeritus of English at Simon Fraser University, and the prize-winning author of The Politics of the Imagination: A Life of F.R. Scott and Professing English: A Life of Roy Daniells. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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