Historical Perspectives on Canadian Publishing
  • McMaster Home
    • McMaster A-Z Index
    • Academics
    • Discover McMaster
    • Future Students
    • Research
    • Student Life
  • Library Digital Collections
    • Digital Russell
    • Kirtas Book Collection
    • PW20C
    • World War, 1939-1945, German Concentration Camps and Prisons Collection
    • Historical Perspectives on Canadian Publishing
    • Richard Sylvan - Life and Works
    • Digital Collections Youtube Channel
    • Digital Commons (Institutional Repository)
    • Scan on Demand Collection
  • Themes
    • Publishing Houses and the Periodical Press
    • People in Publishing
    • Authors and Their Publishers
    • The Business of Publishing
    • Production (Design, Illustration, Technology)
    • Publishing and Canadian Identity
  • Browse by...
    • Contributing Institution
    • Case Study Title
    • Case Study Author
    • Creator
    • Publisher
    • Era
    • Date
    • Place
    • Material Type
    • Images
  • About
    • Overview
    • Partners
    • Funding
    • Case Study Authors
    • Archival resources
    • Publishing Resources
    • About Records on this Site
    • Credits
    • Contact
    • Launch Event
Historical Perspectives on Canadian Publishing
info

Themes

  • Publishing Houses and the Periodical Press
  • People in Publishing
  • Authors and Their Publishers
  • The Business of Publishing
  • Production (Design, Illustration, Technology)
  • Publishing and Canadian Identity
  • Increase text size Larger Text
  • Decrease text size Smaller Text
  • Print Print
Home

jlennox

  • View
  • Track

Personal Information

Full Name
John Lennox
Bio

John Lennox is University Professor, Department of English, York University and a specialist in Canadian literature. His research interests focus on literary history, life writing, and editing. His recent publications include “Letters and the Editor” in CANADA: Society and the Individual (Siauliai University, Lithuania, 2006) and an introduction to Ralph Connor’s The Arm of Gold (Formac, 2007).

Affiliation
York University
Country
Canada
Personal Statement About Topic

I have long admired Deacon. He left the practice of law to become a professional literary critic at a time when such an occupation was at best uncertain and most often perilous. Over his forty-year career as a well-known and widely read bookman in the pages of the periodical and popular press, he aimed to create a readership for Canadian writers and writing. Against all odds, he succeeded which was and is a tremendous achievement for him and for Canadian letters. Part of that achievement came from his early recognition of publishers as colleagues and his whole-hearted willingness to work with them in a common cause many years before the bulwark of the Canada Council, of other governmental cultural supports, and of the assured mass readership of high school and university curricula devoted to the study of Canadian literature. In good times and bad, Deacon never lost faith in his ambition for Canada. He simply worked on until he was no longer able to do so. For his contribution to the cultural making of this country in the first half of the twentieth century, he looms very large for me in the circle of extraordinary Canadians.

Case studies by John Lennox

Case study :

William Arthur Deacon: Reviewing, Advertising, and Publishers

As literary editor of Saturday Night (1922-8), the Mail and Empire (1928-36), and the Globe and Mail (1936-60), William Arthur Deacon (1890-1977) was Canada’s best-known bookman. He aimed to create a readership for the appreciation of Canadian writers and for the purchase of Canadian books.

See all...

  • Case Studies
  • Books
  • Publishers' Catalogues
  • Letters
  • Dust Jackets
  • Photographs
  • Images

More...

Keyword search

More options

This website was made possible by the Canadian Culture Online Program of the Department of Canadian Heritage, Library and Archives Canada and the Canadian Council of Archives


Overview
Partners
Funding
Case Study Authors
Archival Resources
Publishing Resources
About Metadata Fields
Credits
Contact

This website works best with Firefox 3+ and Internet Explorer 7+