Marguerite Andersen

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Marguerite Andersen

Marguerite Andersen CM (born October 15, 1924) is a primarily francophone writer and educator, who is currently based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, where she is a teacher at the Toronto Linden School.

Biography[]

Andersen was born in Germany, and received the Staatsexamen at the Free University of Berlin and has studied at France's Sorbonne. She came to Canada in 1958 after living in various nations such as England, Ethiopia, Tunisia and the United States. Her Ph.D in French Studies is from the Université de Montréal.

She has also taught at Concordia University, Mount St. Vincent University and the University of Guelph.

In 1996, Andersen produced a play at Factory Theatre in Toronto called Stations in a Painter's Life about German born Canadian artist Christiane Pflug, based on the life of the artist until her suicide in 1972

Since 1998, she has been Editor for the quarterly French literary journal Virages ISSN 1203-8792.

She won the 2009 French-language Trillium Award, category "Prix de poésie Trillium" for her book Le Figuier sur le toit and 2014 in the category "Prix du livre d'enfant Trillium".[1]

In December 2016, Andersen was named a Member of the Order of Canada.[2]

Selected works[]

  • 1965: Paul Claudel et l'Allemagne (Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa)
  • 1972: Mother was not a person (Content Publishing/Blank Rose Books)
  • 1975: Paroles Rebelles ISBN 2-89091-112-8 (reissued 1992; with Christine Klein-Lataud; Éditions du Remue-ménage)
  • 1982: De mémoire de femme ISBN 2-89026-313-4 (Quinze)
  • 1984: L'Autrement pareille ISBN 0-920814-63-8 (Prise de Parole)
  • 1991: Courts Métrages et Instantanés ISBN 2-89423-007-9 (Prise de Parole)
  • 1992: L'Homme-papier ISBN 2-89091-117-9 (Editions du Remue-ménage)
  • 1993: La chambre noire du bonheur ISBN 2-89045-990-X (Hurtubuise HMH)
  • 1994: Conversations dans l'Interzone ISBN 2-89423-051-6 (Prise de Parole)
  • 1995: La Soupe ISBN 2-89423-062-1, ISBN 2-89031-229-1 (won 1996 Grand Prix du Salon du livre de Toronto; Triptyque)
  • 1997: La Bicyclette ISBN 2-89423-086-9, ISBN 2-921706-63-6 (Centre FORA)
  • 1998: Le Crus de l'Esplanade ISBN 2-89423-093-1 (Prise de Parole)
  • 2000: Bleu sur Blanc ISBN 2-89423-118-0 (Prise de Parole)
  • 2003: Dreaming our Space ISBN 1-55071-152-0 (Guernica)
  • 2004: Parallèles ISBN 2-89423-168-7 (Prise de Parole)
  • 2006: Doucement le bonheur (Gently happiness) ISBN 978-2-89423-206-4 (Prise de Parole); about the events surrounding the 1929-30 trials of MP Louis-Mathias Auger for rape, and a fictionalized account of the protagonists later lives[3][4]
  • 2009: Le figuier sur le toit ISBN 9782923274492 (Les Éditions l'Interligne)
  • 2011: La vie devant elles ISBN 978-2-89423-277-4 (Prise de Parole)
  • 2013: La mauvaise mère ISBN 9782894239063 (Prise de Parole)

Theatre[]

  • 1996: Christiane : Stations in a Painter's Life*, Festival The Gathering, Factory Theatre, Toronto, 1996.
  • 1996–97: La Fête, Prix O'Neill-Karsh, mises en lecture Théâtre La Catapulte, Ottawa, 1997 et Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario, Sudbury, 1996.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Andersen, twice". Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2017-11-19.
  2. ^ "Order of Canada's newest appointees include Paralympian, Supreme Court judge and astrophysicist". CBC News, December 30, 2016.
  3. ^ Backhouse, Constance (1981). ""Calculated to Reflect on the Dignity of Parliament": Rape in the House of Commons, Ottawa 1929". In Flaherty, David H. (ed.). Essays in the History of Canadian Law: Volume X - A Tribute to Peter Oliver. University of Toronto Press, Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History. pp. 33–57. ISBN 0-8020-9911-4.
  4. ^ Pelletier, Jean Yves (June 15, 2015). "Auger, Louis Mathias". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 14, 2019.

External links[]

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