aimeeandbeatles
watermelon
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2007
- Messages
- 20,112
TIL that the Navy Seal copypasta is actually newer than I thought. It first showed up around 2010. I thought it was from the mid-2000s.
It was placed quite high, on the north anta of the pronaos.Apparently (?) the famous inscription at the athena polias (ie athena of the polis) temple at Priene, noting how it was built with funds provided by alexander the great, was deliberately placed six metres above the ground, so as to escape casual attention. Cause it was considered sacrilegious to self-promote at sacred sites.
Today I learned that a Canadian novel about a woman getting into a sexual relationship with a bear won the 1976 Governor General's Literary Award.
So it was inspired by a Haida artist? I'm surprised people nowadays aren't screeching about cultural appropriation.Today I learned that a Canadian novel about a woman getting into a sexual relationship with a bear won the 1976 Governor General's Literary Award.
Today I learned that a Canadian novel about a woman getting into a sexual relationship with a bear won the 1976 Governor General's Literary Award.
I'm kind of surprised it won the award. I guess the governor general that year was drunk.
I'm kind of surprised it won the award. I guess the governor general that year was drunk.
Back in 1976, when most people thought of Canadian novels, they tended to think about authors like Farley Mowat and Pierre Berton. I've read books by both of them, and they're who I think of as "quintessentially Canadian" (along with Margaret Atwood - first read her material in college, and Lucy Maud Montgomery - it used to be that most Canadian girls either read or had read to them the Anne of Green Gables books).Reading the article you linked it was very highly regarded, and not just by the award committee.
Back in 1976, when most people thought of Canadian novels, they tended to think about authors like Farley Mowat and Pierre Berton. I've read books by both of them, and they're who I think of as "quintessentially Canadian" (along with Margaret Atwood - first read her material in college, and Lucy Maud Montgomery - it used to be that most Canadian girls either read or had read to them the Anne of Green Gables books).
This book that Aimee linked... no.
You forgot the three Albertan Canadians (one in Edmonton, one in Red Deer, one in Calgary), and the Nova Scotian Canadian (something I've pointed out is that if you get Aimee and I in the same room and have us speak, chances are that we might have different accents), and I think there's someone from up in the Territories (not sure if Yukon or Northwest).Yeah, I think that part was absurd too. I don't think there is any such thing as 'quintessentially Canadian.' Like the US, Canada is too diverse for any such thing to exist. Here at CFC, off the top of my head, we have a Vancouver Canadian, a Northern Ontario Canadian, a Toronto Canadian, and a Quebec Canadian among our Canadians. I think it would be hard to find a point of universal agreement, much less something 'quintessential' that you all reflected.
I'll concede that. But it still doesn't mean everyone's going to run out and buy it. Farley Mowat was assigned reading in high school (Never Cry Wolf). This book? I can't fathom it.But that bit wasn't what I was looking at. The book was well received. There were a lot of references to other writers and reviewers besides the big award Aimee mentioned. There were a whole lot of positive comments about the style of her writing. More about that than the "bold" subject matter, actually. Subject matter is much more...well...subjective, and yeah, "Great book, sex with a bear!" isn't something I'd expect to hear every day. But good writers write well, whatever they write about.
The only "Canadian" book I remember being assigned in school was Hatchet. And it's not even Canadian.
I don't think there was ever a Canadian-focused module in the curriculum at my school, besides the basic "hey we had natives and we treated them poorly" chapters, and there was no assigned reading or anything like that associated with it.
Seriously?
US History was a required course when I was in high school, as was 'government' which was strictly US government. 'History of California' was also required curriculum in...fourth grade? Maybe fifth. It seems strange to me if there wasn't a focus on Canada in Canadian schools, but maybe that would be quintessentially Canadian.
All the schools I went to emphasized Canadian history to some extent (for example, I learned about Louis Riel in elementary, junior high, high school, and college). My junior high social studies teacher put together a unit about history going back to the Vikings, and he also figured that kids aged 11-14 weren't too young to learn about real-time politics. We didn't do anything about ancient civilizations, but we did do a real-time unit on apartheid in South Africa, including a guest speaker who had lived there under that system.The only "Canadian" book I remember being assigned in school was Hatchet. And it's not even Canadian.
I don't think there was ever a Canadian-focused module in the curriculum at my school, besides the basic "hey we had natives and we treated them poorly" chapters, and there was no assigned reading or anything like that associated with it.
It isn't. Education is a provincial responsibility, and as long as the teachers put in something about Canadian history, I guess they can tick the box and call it done. It sounds to me like Synsensa had an incompetent teacher, if that's all that was offered.It seems strange to me if there wasn't a focus on Canada in Canadian schools, but maybe that would be quintessentially Canadian.