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Miriam Waddington (1917–2004)

Auteur van Canadian Jewish Short Stories

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Over de Auteur

Growing up in Winnipeg's Russian Jewish immigrant community, Miriam Waddington early on experienced a mixture of European traditions and Canadian life. After she earned degrees from the University of Toronto and the University of Pennsylvania, she became a social worker in Montreal. During this toon meer period she published poetry that expressed her anger over social conditions. In 1960, Waddington left social work and earned an M.A. in English. She taught at York University from 1964 until her retirement, in 1983. Waddington's poetry and short fiction are informed by her being both a Jew and a woman. Although her work conveys a sense of loss and a feeling of displacement, the despair "is always mitigated, for she retains threads of traditions that still anchor her, memories that keep her company, and an ironic sense of humor," according to An Anthology of Canadian Literature. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder
Fotografie: Bank of Canada

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The collected poems of A. M. Klein (1974) — Redacteur — 14 exemplaren

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Geboortedatum
1917-12-23
Overlijdensdatum
2004-03-03
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
Canada
Geboorteplaats
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Plaats van overlijden
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Woonplaatsen
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Montréal, Québec, Canada
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Opleiding
University of Toronto (BA 1939|MA 1968 English)
University of Pennsylvania (MA 1945)
Beroepen
social worker
lecturer (English)
poet
short story writer
essayist
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards (1963, 1966, 1974)
Korte biografie
Miriam Waddington, née Dworkin, was born to a Russian-Jewish immigrant family in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She studied English at the University of Toronto and social work at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1945, she moved to Montreal, Quebec, where she worked as a case worker and taught social work for many years. She became part of a Montreal literary circle that included F. R. Scott, Irving Layton, and Louis Dudek. Her first published poetry collections, Green World (1945) and The Second Silence (1955), celebrated the natural world. In 1964, she joined the faculty of York University as a professor of English, and taught there until her retirement in 1983.



She was awarded Borestone Mountain Awards for best poetry in the years 1963, 1966, and 1974. She received the J.J. Segal Award in 1972. She was the Canada Council Exchange Poet to Wales in 1980, and served as writer-in-residence at the Windsor Public Library and at the University of Ottawa.
She also wrote a volume of fiction, Summer at Lonely Beach and Other Stories (1982), a critical study of A.M. Klein (1970), and numerous essays and reviews. She edited John Sutherland: Essays, Controversies and Poems (1972), Klein's Collected Poems (1974), and Canadian Jewish Short Stories (1990).

Her poem "Jacques Cartier in Toronto" was featured on the back of the Canadian $100 bill released in 2004.

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Statistieken

Werken
17
Ook door
1
Leden
50
Populariteit
#316,248
Waardering
4.1
ISBNs
21
Talen
2

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