Abstract:
Alice Munro's short stories delineate the Canadian social imaginary with a particular emphasis on realism combined with the particulars of daily life. The author approaches Canadianness through the local and the personal, reflecting the otherwise grand narratives of nation and history through her attention to banal life. This paper attempts to read Munro's construction of Canadian identity through her realism, orality, and narrative technique in view of providing a framework for understanding her faithfulness to realism in writing.