For the sake of convenience, Canadian poetry can be categorized into
three phases, namely, Confederation to the World War I, the 1920s to
the World War II, and the late twentieth century to the early twenty-first
century.
Inspired by the English Romantics’ and early Victorians’ love for nature, the
Canadian poets of the Confederation School, such as Sir Charles G. D. Roberts,
Bliss Carman, Archibald Lampman, Duncan Campbell Scott, and Isabella Valancy
Crawford, looked for themes in their own natural landscape. The poets of the
second phase became critical of Canadian values, a tendency strengthened by
the Canadian experience of the Great Depression and the World War I. An outlet
for the ‘new poetry’ and the emergence of modernism was created in literary
publications, namely, The Canadian Forum (1920) and Montreal’s McGill Fortnightly
Review (1925-27). Edwin John Pratt was one of the finest poets of this period,
and his poetry reflects his fascination with the sea, his sense of the impersonal
violence of nature, and his fundamentally tragic world view.
But Canadian poetry has undergone radical change in the third phase with
the contributions made by Earle Birney, Al Purdy, Dorothy Livesay, and Irving
Layton. The poetry of these writers describes their experiences, Canadian
landscape, and their commitment to feminism. They broke the tradition of
descriptive nature poem, exhibiting a new social awareness and experimenting
with new techniques characterized by cosmopolitanism, metaphysical strains,
symbolism, and so on. Women poets like Jay Macpherson, P. K. Page,
Anne Wilkinson, and Margaret Avison also contributed to the growth of
Canadian poetry.
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