Nora Foster Stovel

Standard Name: Stovel, Nora Foster

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Margaret Laurence
Again one reviewer, this time a woman writing for a Canadian magazine, insisted against Laurence's protests that the novel was entirely autobiographical.
Laurence, Margaret. Dance on the Earth: A Memoir. McClelland and Stewart, 1989.
208
The Feminist Companion called The Divinersa spacious novel which translates experience...
Publishing Margaret Laurence
As a child and teenager, Margaret Wemyss (later ML ) was constantly writing stories and poems. She destroyed most of this writing (of which her aunt/stepmother, Margaret Wemyss , was both an inspiration and a...
Textual Features Margaret Laurence
The Olden Days Coat, called by Nora StovelML 's best-loved childrens' book, is also highly characteristic in its fascination with the passage of time. Ten-year-old Sally dresses up in some clothes which belonged...
Textual Production Margaret Laurence
As a hard-working writer and public intellectual ML produced quantities of non-fictional prose: essays, reviews, graduation addresses, and so on. A selection of this still highly readable and thought-provoking output was edited by Nora Foster Stovel

Timeline

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Texts

Stovel, Nora Foster. “’Every Savage Can Dance’: Choreographing Courtship”. Persuasions, Vol.
23
, 2001, pp. 29-49.
Drabble, Margaret. “A Day Out in Kew”. Jane Austen Sings the Blues, edited by Nora Foster Stovel, University of Alberta Press, 2009, pp. 57-65.
Laurence, Margaret. Colours of Speech: Margaret Laurence’s Early Writings. Editor Stovel, Nora Foster, Juvenilia Press, 2000.
Stovel, Nora Foster. Divining Margaret Laurence. A Study of Her Complete Writings. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2008.
Laurence, Margaret. Embryo Words: Margaret Laurence’s Early Writings. Editor Stovel, Nora Foster, Juvenilia Press, 1997.
Stovel, Bruce, and Bruce Stovel. “Female Difficulties: Charlotte Lennoxs The Female Quixote and Frances Burneys CamillaJane Austen and Company. Collected Essays, edited by Nora Foster Stovel and Nora Foster Stovel, University of Alberta Press, 2011, pp. 35-53.
Stovel, Nora Foster. “Introduction to Margaret Drabble”. Persuasions, Vol.
15
, p. 74.
Stovel, Nora Foster. Margaret Drabble: Symbolic Moralist. Starmont House, 1989.
Stovel, Nora Foster. “Modernizing Elinor and Marianne”. JASNA News, Vol.
31
, No. 2, p. 16.
Stovel, Bruce, and Bruce Stovel. “The Genesis of Evelyn Waughs Comic Vision. Waugh, Captain Grimes, and Decline and FallJane Austen and Company: Collected Essays, edited by Nora Foster Stovel and Nora Foster Stovel, University of Alberta Press, 2011, pp. 181-0.