Faculty of Arts Scholarly Works
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- ItemOpen AccessComputer-Assisted Linguistic Analysis(1973-05) Wolfart, H. Christoph; Pardo, FrancisLinguistic analysis depends on a variety of highly structured arrangements of textual and lexical data. These same materials also serve as input to the Inflectional Analysis Package which tests linguistic rules against a large body of spontaneously recorded data. In addition to file processing and rule testing, the identification of new stems and affixes leads to a substantive improvement of the original files. At the same time, the analytic programs may be regarded as a model of morphological analysis. In describing the Cree Project, this report also provides an outline for more detailed or more technical discussions which will appear at a later date; it also intends to present a specific example of computer applications within a relatively small-scale project. A user's guide which makes the programs accessible to other scholars is included as an appendix.
- ItemOpen AccessTeton Dakota Phonology(1974-06) Carter, Richard T.
- ItemOpen AccessAustralian Literature and the Canadian Comparison(1979) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen AccessAn Osteological Analysis of Human Remains from Kayenta Anasazi Sites in Northern Arizona(1979-06) Wade, William D.
- ItemOpen AccessGrammatical Notes on the Penobscot Language from Frank Speck's Penobscot Transformer Tales(1979-10) Voorhis, Paul
- ItemOpen AccessThe Colonial Heroine(1980) Brydon, Diana
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- ItemOpen AccessWordsworth's Daffodils: A Recurring Motif in Contemporary Canadian Literature.(1982) Brydon, DianaIt is a commonplace of criticism in the new literatures in English that colonial writers experienced difficulty in adapting the English language and English literary forms to the very different natural environments they experienced in all parts of the Commonwealth. Anglocentric attitudes dictated the belief that Australia was the antipodes, the reverse of the true and Northern hemisphere, that North America was a wilderness that must be turned into a garden, that India and Africa were heathen to be converted or savage to be tamed. The native inhabitants of these countries were viewed as part of their barbaric landscapes, equally in need of change to meet English standards. Finally, an imported and in the colonial context an ossifying, Romantic tradition prevented immigrants and the native-born alike from seeing their natural environments with native eyes. As the chief representative of this Romantic tradition, Wordsworth looms large.
- ItemOpen AccessCaribbean Revolution and Literary Convention(1982) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen AccessRewriting The Tempest(1984) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen Access"Canada" in The Year That Was.(1984) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen Access"Canada" in The Year That Was.(1985) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen Access"Canada" in The Year That Was.(1986) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen Access‘It Could Not be Told’: Making Meaning in The Wars(1986) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen AccessThe social histories of smallpox and tuberculosis in Canada (culture, evolution and disease)(1989) Thorpe, Ethel L. M.
- ItemOpen AccessPeople & Land in Northern Manitoba: 1990 Conference at the University of Manitoba(1992) Lithman, Y.G.; Riewe, R.R.; Wiest, R.E.; Wrigley, R.E.
- ItemOpen AccessIntroduction: reading postcoloniality, reading Canada.(1995) Brydon, Diana
- ItemOpen AccessCyberwriting and the Borders of Identity: "What's in a Name?" in Kroetsch's The Puppeteer and Mistry's Such a Long Journey(1996-06-30) Williams, DavidNo abstract.
- ItemOpen AccessThe Enemy Within’: Political Commitment in Contemporary English Canadian Literature(1998) Brydon, Diana