Susan Birkwood
Associate Professor, Teaching Stream
- B.A. Honours, M.A., Ph.D. (University of Western Ontario)
- Email Susan Birkwood
Research Interests
- Indigenous and Canadian literatures
- Nineteenth-Century British Literature
- Historical fiction
- Travel literature
Current Research
Many years ago, my doctoral dissertation study of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century exploration and travel accounts of Canada led to research and teaching interests in Indigenous literatures and Canadian historical fiction, interests which have now expanded to include counter-narratives by Indigenous visual artists. That early study entailed considerations of genre, aesthetic conventions, gender, class, and ethnicity; however, it also paid particular attention to the theory of social development associated with the Scottish Enlightenment that posited a four-stage progression from savagery to civilisation based on modes of subsistence (from hunting and gathering through herding, agriculture, and commerce). This theory, one that informed European texts in the areas of economics, history, early ethnography, and literature, among others, was the filter through which British explorers and travellers observed North America, and its lexicon shaped not only literary representations of Indigenous peoples and of the settler-invader society but government policy as well. We live with its legacy still.
Initially intrigued by the ways in which some contemporary Canadian writers of historical fiction were engaging with the colonial past, I began to look at issues of genre as well as the implications of the relationship between past and present in texts that Herb Wyile characterised as 鈥渟peculative fictions.鈥 Since then, I have brought the work of commentators such as Wyile and Jerome de Groot to bear upon these contemporary texts while considering earlier discussions of the historical novel and its connections to the Bildungsroman in the works of critics such as Mikhail Bakhtin and Georg Luk谩cs. But if the historical novel is a 鈥渇orm of commentary,鈥 鈥渁 way to build the imagined community of a nation,鈥 and / or, 鈥渁 journey towards . . . redemption . . . and revelation鈥 (de Groot), what is the relationship of the fiction that brings particular regions, peoples, and moments to imaginative expression to the larger Indigenous and Canadian realities鈥攅specially given the history of government policies and practices steeped in 鈥渟hame and prejudice鈥 to quote the title of a recent exhibition by Kent Monkman?
Honours and Awards
- Professional Achievement Award 2017
- Professional Achievement Award 2010
- FASS Teaching Award 2009
Books
Knight, Ann Cuthbert. A Year in Canada (1816). Ed. Susan Birkwood. London: Canadian Poetry Press, 2004.
Recent Publications
鈥溾 Western Humanities Review. 73.3 (Fall 2019), pp. 17-49.
鈥鈥 Material Cultures in Canada. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2015. 107-27.
鈥溾 Nordlit 23 (Spring 2008): 25-38.
鈥淎nna Brownell Murphy Jameson.鈥 The Literature of Travel and Exploration: An Encyclopaedia. Vol. 2. London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2003. 637-39.
鈥淭rue or False: Anna Jameson on the position of women in European and Anishinaubae society.鈥 Nineteenth-Century Feminisms 2 (Spring 2000): 32-47.
Recent Presentations
June 2019. 鈥淸T]he / syllabled fur鈥; or, Portrait of the poet as 鈥渕utt.鈥 ACQL / ALCQ. Congress. Vancouver, BC.
November 2018. 鈥淪hifting the Narrative of Winnipeg鈥檚 North End in Katherena Vermette鈥檚 The Break.鈥 Spectral Cities Conference. Calgary Institute for the Humanities. Calgary, AB.
May 2017. 鈥淎 Youth Detained and the Past Arrested in Katherena Vermette鈥檚 The Break.鈥 ACQL Annual Conference at Congress. Ryerson University. Toronto, ON.
May 2016. 鈥淭he Legacies of Armed and Cultural Conflict in Guy Vanderhaeghe鈥檚 The Last Crossing.鈥 ACCUTE at Congress. University of Calgary. Calgary, AB.
August 2014. 鈥淭he 鈥榃retched Animals,鈥 the 鈥楬umble Beasts鈥: Timothy Findley鈥檚 The Wars and Joseph Boyden鈥檚 Three Day Road鈥 Canadian Literature of World War I. Ottawa, ON.
July 2011. 鈥淸N]ew ideas of the Indian character suggest themselves鈥: Anna Jameson as explorer and cultural observer in Winter Studies and Summer Rambles in Canada (1838). Travel in the Nineteenth Century: Narratives, Histories and Collections. University of Lincoln, Lincoln, U. K.
May 2011. 鈥淚s it still a cinch? The circulation of clothing and accessories across geographical and social boundaries in Guy Vanderhaeghe鈥檚 The Last Crossing.鈥 Canadian Literature Symposium: Material Cultures. University of Ottawa. Ottawa.
February 2008. 鈥淔rom 鈥榥aked country鈥 to 鈥榮heltering ice鈥: Rudy Wiebe鈥檚 revisionist treatment of John Franklin鈥檚 first arctic narrative.鈥 Arctic Discourses. University of Troms酶, Norway.