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Explore how "And the Birds Rained Down" delves into societal power dynamics influencing historiography through narrative style and visual elements.
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Surviving the Fire: An Exploration of History in And the Birds Rained Down
The Great Matheson Fire • “A century later, the so-called Great Matheson Fire of 1916 remains the deadliest in Canadian history” (CBC).
“Photo of the remains of Matheson taken after the Great Fire of 1916” (CBC).
“With 223 dead, burying all the victims of the Great Fire of 1916 was a big job for the survivors” (CBC).
Thesis Statement • This paper will analyze the author’s narrative and structural choices and its inclusion of visual works of both photography and painting to prove that And the Birds Rained Down explores how societal power structures such as class and region influence historiography.
Form of the Novel Effects of first- and third-person narration: • Multiple points of view • Fragmentary style • Self-consciousness Which all challenge totalizing historical narratives
Content of Novel Different means to share stories: • Oral Tradition • Photographs • Paintings Methods mirror the novel’s narrative form
The Style of the Novel • An alternative account of history • Role of multiple perspectives • Mixing non-fiction and fiction
Conclusion • Essentially, through the redemptive quality of art, Saucier’s novel And the Birds Rained Down reveals historical events about, as the narrator describes it, “when life scrapes the depths before ascending to the light;” and as a result, she allows these marginalized stories of The Great Matheson Fires to arise from the ashes of history and live in brightness (Saucier 148).