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206 Canadian Studies News and Notes This symposium seeks to bring together critics, historians, editors, translators, and theorists whose research on late nineteenth-century and twentieth-century literatures contributes to the study of modernism in Canada. Paper proposals are welcome on any issue related to modernism and Canadian literature from the late nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century -whether case studies of specific texts and authors, literary and cultural histories, theoretical applications, discussions of editorial problems and methods , or intermeclia approaches. Topics for papers are open, but may relate to one or more of the following: international contexts and influences; cultural modernism, modernity, or modernization; antimodernism , mass culture, or popular culture; political and social organizations/movements; writers' groups, associations, and foundations; recordings, readings, films, and radio broadcasts; visual art, illustration, and book/magazine design; prefaces, editorials, and manifestos; critics and reviewers; little magazines and literary presses; publishers and editors ; production, distribution, and marketing; anthologies and anthologists; translation and translators; contemporary editing and editions of modernist authors. Selected papers by symposium participants will be considered for an essay collection in the Reappraisals: Canadian Writers series, published by the University of Ottawa Press. Send 300-500 word proposals (hard copy or Word/WordPerfect attachments) to: Dean Irvine, Department of English, University ofOttawa,70 Laurier Avenue East, Ottawa, ON, KlN 6NS, e-mail: irvine@uottawa.ca or fax: (613) 562-5990. Erratum In "'Canadian Classic' and 'Commodity Export': The Nationalism of 'Our' Anne of Green Gables" (vol. 36.1), footnote number 10 included incorrect information about a story by PaulineJohnson. The second sentence in the note should read: "This story has a boy adopted and exploited by his putative caregivers; he, none the less, saves them when their house is broken into by burglars." ...

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