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Towards a Critical History of The Writers' Union of Canada, 1972-1992
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Ramlo, Erin (Author)
Title
Towards a Critical History of The Writers' Union of Canada, 1972-1992
Abstract
The Writers’ Union of Canada was founded in November of 1973 “to unite Canadian writers for the advancement of their common interests.” Drawing on extensive archival collections – from both the Writers’ Union and its member authors – this dissertation offers the first critical history of the organization and its work, from pre-founding to the early 1990s, arguing that the Writers’ Union has fundamentally influenced Canadian literature, as an industry, as a community, and as a field of study. I begin by tracing the contextual history of the organization’s founding, interrogating how union organizing, celebrity, and friendship underpin the organization’s work. Chapter One discusses the Writers’ Union’s programs, reforms, and interventions aimed at ‘fostering’ writing in Canada as I argue that the Union was instrumental in building a fiscal-cultural futurity for CanLit. In Chapter Two, I consider the role that women played in this important work, as I highlight the labour of female Union members and the all-female administrative staff, who maintained and supported the organization’s work through its first twenty years. In Chapter Three I draw attention to the stories of, perspectives of, and experiences of BIPOC authors in relation to the Writers’ Union. While the Writers’ Union’s involvement in race relations is often positioned as having ‘begun’ with the Writing Thru Race conference in 1994, this chapter uses the archives to reveal a much longer trajectory of racialized conflict within and around the organization, providing important context for the very controversial and public battles about appropriation and race that would explode in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Throughout this work, I look to see how institutional narratives are deployed and upheld, and to what ends; how successful advocacy work is often effaced and forgotten; how institutional structures function; and how their boundaries and intentions are challenged and developed over time.
Type
Ph.D., English and Cultural Studies
University
McMaster University
Place
Hamilton, Ont.
Date
2021
# of Pages
324 pages
Language
en
Accessed
11/16/21, 8:18 PM
Library Catalog
macsphere.mcmaster.ca
Extra
Accepted: 2021-09-30T01:50:46Z
Citation
Ramlo, E. (2021). Towards a Critical History of The Writers’ Union of Canada, 1972-1992 [Ph.D., English and Cultural Studies, McMaster University]. https://macsphere.mcmaster.ca/handle/11375/26928
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