Born | 26 May 1954 Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada |
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Occupation | critic, editor, writer, professor, public intellectual |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | B.A., M.A., Hon. D.Can.L., Hon. D.Lit. |
Alma mater | University of Alberta, University of Manitoba (hon.), Athabasca University (hon.) |
Notable works | Judith |
Notable awards | Seal First Novel Award Howard O'Hagan Award Grant MacEwan Author's Award Lorne Pierce Medal |
Website | |
www |
Aritha van Herk, CM AOE FRSC , [1] is a Canadian writer, critic, editor, public intellectual, and university professor. [2] Her work often includes feminist themes, and depicts and analyzes the culture of western Canada.
She was born in Wetaskiwin, Alberta (near Edmonton) on 26 May 1954 and spent her childhood in the village of Edberg, Alberta. Her parents and elder siblings immigrated to Canada from the Netherlands before she was born, having endured Nazi occupation in WWII. Van Herk studied Canadian literature and Creative Writing at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, graduating with a B.A. Honours in 1976, and an M.A. in 1978. [3]
Since 1983, van Herk has been teaching at the University of Calgary. She teaches Creative Writing (prose), Canadian Literature (fiction), and Contemporary World Fiction in English, and Fiction by Women. [4] [5]
She won the University of Calgary Students' Union Teaching Excellence Award for the Faculty of Arts in 2011. In the same year, she received the Writers' Guild of Alberta's Golden Pen Lifetime Achievement Award and the Alberta Order of Excellence. [6]
She received an honorary Doctor of Canon Law from St. John's College, University of Manitoba in 2013. [7]
In 2016, Van Herk gave the Lecture of a Lifetime at the University of Calgary and wrote a short book to commemorate the university's 50th anniversary. [8] [9]
She received an honorary Doctor of Letters from Athabasca University in 2018. [10]
Van Herk's writing career began with the publication of her M.A. thesis in 1978. Judith, a novel that explores a female protagonist's experiences in both rural and urban Canadian spaces, was the first winner of the Seal First Novel Award (C$50,000) from McClelland and Stewart, which granted the book international distribution throughout North America and Europe. In 2018, Judith was adapted to the stage by Heather Davies. The play, titled Judith: Memories of a Lady Pig Farmer, premiered at the Blyth Festival in Blyth, Ontario on 27 June 2018. [11]
With her second novel, The Tent Peg (1981), van Herk continued to focus on issues of both female experience and the Canadian wilderness in a narrative where the female protagonist disguises herself as a man in order to get a job as a cook in a northern geological bush-camp.
Van Herk challenged literary conventions with her third novel, No Fixed Address: An Amorous Journey (1986), a parody of the picaresque genre in which underwear saleswoman Arachne Manteia traverses the Canadian prairies in her vintage Mercedes-Benz. [12] The novel, nominated for the Governor General's Award, won the Writers' Guild of Alberta Award for Fiction. [13]
Like No Fixed Address, van Herk's fourth novel Restlessness (1998) is written in an a-typical narrative form, and features another female character on the fly. In this reversed Sheherazade tale, Dorcas, a nomadic protagonist, divulges her life story to the man whom she has contracted to kill her. [14]
Van Herk has published a number of works blending fiction and criticism, often set in the Canadian west and the far north. [15] In 1990, she initiated a new genre she called geografictione, with Places Far From Ellesmere. [16] As a travel narrative that analyzes the concepts of both travel and narrative, Places Far From Ellesmere questions the journeys that take place within fiction itself, including Tolstoy's Anna Karenina . [17] Van Herk wrote the afterword for the 1990 New Canadian Library edition of Marian Engel's novel Bear and the introduction to the 2000 University of Alberta Press edition of Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man.
Van Herk has also published two collections of essays and ficto-criticism, In Visible Ink (crypto-frictions) (1991) and A Frozen Tongue (1992). Both works combine aspects of fiction, memoir, poetry, and criticism.
Van Herk's more recent work has focused on the history of Alberta, with Mavericks: an Incorrigible History of Alberta (2001), winner of the Grant MacEwan Author's Award. [18] Mavericks led to a permanent exhibition by the same name. It opened at Calgary's Glenbow Museum in 2007, was nominated for an Alberta Tourism Award in the category of Alberta Pride, and won the White Hat of the Year Award from the city of Calgary. Audacious and Adamant: the Story of Maverick Alberta (2007) was published to correspond with the Mavericks Exhibition.
Van Herk's short stories, essays, articles, and book reviews regularly appear in The Globe and Mail , Calgary Herald , Alberta Views , Elle , Chatelaine , Canadian Fiction Magazine, Canadian Geographic , [19] and The Walrus , as well as other national and international periodicals and newspapers.
Van Herk is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada since 1997, [18] and has served on juries, including the Governor General's Award and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize. As a university professor she has taught graduate students who have gone on to literary success, including Anita Rau Badami, Thomas Wharton, and Jessica Grant.
Van Herk continues to present her creative and critical work in venues in many countries. [5]
George Harry Bowering, is a prolific Canadian novelist, poet, historian, and biographer. He was the first Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate.
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Sheila Martin Watson was a Canadian novelist, critic and teacher. She "is best known for her modernist novel, The Double Hook." The Canadian Encyclopedia declares that: "Publication of Watson's novel The Double Hook (1959) marks the start of contemporary writing in Canada."
Rudy Henry Wiebe is a Canadian author and professor emeritus in the department of English at the University of Alberta since 1992. Rudy Wiebe was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in the year 2000.
Thomas Wharton is a Canadian writer from Edmonton, Alberta.
The Double Hook is a novel written by Sheila Watson, which is considered "a seminal work in the development of contemporary Canadian literature." Published in 1959, The Double Hook is written in a style more like prose poetry than fiction. It is often considered to be Canada's first modernist novel due to how it "departs from traditional plot, character development, form and style to tell a poetic tale of human suffering and redemption that is at once fabular, allegorical and symbolic." The Canadian Encyclopedia declares that: "Publication of Watson's novel The Double Hook (1959) marks the start of contemporary writing in Canada."
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Monty Reid is a Canadian poet.
The following is a bibliography of Alberta history.
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The Writers' Guild of Alberta (WGA) was founded in 1980 as a non-profit organization for writers based in Alberta, Canada. It claims to be the largest provincial writers' organization in Canada, representing approximately 1,000 writers throughout the province.
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Bear is a novel by Canadian author Marian Engel, published in 1976. It won the Governor General's Literary Award the same year. It is Engel's fifth novel, and her most famous. The story tells of a lonely archivist sent to work in northern Ontario, where she enters into a sexual relationship with a bear. The book has been called "the most controversial novel ever written in Canada".
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The Alberta Literary Awards (ALA), administered by the Writers’ Guild of Alberta, have been awarded annually since 1982 to recognize outstanding writing by Alberta authors. The awards honour fiction, nonfiction, poetry, drama, children's literature. At the first public ALA Gala in 1994, the inaugural Golden Pen Lifetime Achievement Award was given to W. O. Mitchell.
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