Civic Discourse and Cultural Politics in Canada: A Cacophony of Voices FROM THE PUBLISHER
No previous volume has collected as interesting and broad a collection of essays on Canadian discourse and culture. This volume of representative case studies reflects the Canadian experience in terms of discourse, society, and public culture, linking its discussions to larger political and social issues and theories.
SYNOPSIS
Representative case studies reflect the Canadian experience in terms of discourse, society, and public culture, linking its discussions to larger political and social issues and theories.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
Written primarily by scholars from the field of communication studies, 21 chapters, presented by Ferguson and Shade (both of the Department of Communications, U. of Ottawa, Canada), explore regional, marginalized, dissident, and historical discourses from Canadian political and cultural debates. The interaction of those voices with the dominant culture is the major theme of studies of queers in Calgary, anarchist protestors, "squeegee kids" in the cities, new right ideologues, feminist activists working with digital technology, and First Nations (Native American) Internet activists. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)