University of Toronto Quarterly

University of Toronto Quarterly

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Acclaimed as one of the finest journals focused on the humanities, the University of Toronto Quarterly publishes interdisciplinary articles and review essays of international repute. This interdisciplinary approach provides a depth and quality to the journal that attracts both general readers and specialists from across the humanities.

UTQ Subscribers look forward to the bi-lingual ‘Letters in Canada’ issue, published each spring, which contains reviews of the previous year’s work in Canadian fiction, poetry, drama, translations and works in the humanities. Many of the recent issues have contained over 600 pages of the year's work in creative writing and scholarship!


E-ISSN: 1712-5278
ISSN: 0042-0247
Editors—Victor Li and David Galbraith

Victor Li
Victor Li received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of British Columbia and his doctorate from the University of Cambridge.  He is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of English and the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto.  His research focuses on contemporary literature and critical theory, the continuing influence of primitivism in Western culture, and postcolonial and globalization studies.   The author of The Neo-primitivist Turn: Critical Reflections on Alterity, Culture, and Modernity (University of Toronto Press, 2006), he has published widely in journals such as ARIEL, boundary 2, Criticism, CR: The New Centennial Review, Cultural Critique, English Studies in Canada, Genre, Interventions, and Parallax.  Some recent publications include “Elliptical Interruptions: Or, Why Derrida Prefers Mondialisation to Globalization,” in CR: The New Centennial Review 7.2 (2007), “Necroidealism, or the Subaltern’s Sacrificial Death,” in Interventions 11.3 (2009), and “Globalization’s Robinsonade: Cast Away and Neo-liberal Subject Formation” in Rerouting the Postcolonial (Routledge, 2010).  A chapter on “Primitivism and Postcolonial Literature” is forthcoming in The Cambridge History of Postcolonial Literature.   The co-editor of The University of Toronto Quarterly, Li is also on the editorial advisory boards of ARIEL, CR: The New Centennial Review, and The Journal of Postcolonial Writing.  His current project is a critical examination of the representationalist ontology that underwrites discourses on globalization.


Colin Hill
Colin Hill received his BA from Concordia University and his MA and PhD from McGill University. At present, he is an Associate Professor of Canadian Literature in the Graduate Department of English at the University of Toronto, and in the Department of English and Drama at the University of Toronto Mississauga, where he is also director of the Canadian Studies program. His research explores twentieth-century Canadian fiction and its intersections with international modernist writing. He is the author of Modern Realism in English-Canadian Fiction (University of Toronto Press, 2012) and editor of Waste Heritage: A Novel by Irene Baird (University of Ottawa Press, 2007). His recent articles have appeared in Canadian Literature, Journal of Canadian Studies, Essays on Canadian Writing, Studies in Canadian Literature, and The Canadian Modernists Meet. He is a member of the Editing Modernism in Canada project for which he is editing critical editions of the early novels of Hugh MacLennan and Raymond Knister. He is currently at work on a book about modernism and Canadian cities.


Editorial Address

University of Toronto Quarterly
Jackman Humanities Building
170 St George Street
University of Toronto
Toronto, ON, M5R 2M8
utq@chass.utoronto.ca

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Editorial Policies
University of Toronto Quarterly welcomes contributions in all areas of the humanities – literature, philosophy, fine arts, music, the history of ideas, cultural studies, and so on. It favours articles that appeal to a scholarly readership beyond the specialists in the field of the given submission.

Click here for submission guidelines.

Editorial Address
University of Toronto Quarterly
Jackman Humanities Building
170 St George Street
University of Toronto
Toronto, ON, M5R 2M8
utq@chass.utoronto.ca

UTQ Online

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UTQ is part of Project MUSE, a unique collaboration between libraries and publishers providing 100% full-text, affordable, and user-friendly online access to 300 high-quality humanities, arts, and social sciences journals from various scholarly publishers.

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University of Toronto Quarterly is published with the support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

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