For the sake of the fortieth anniversary of the
writer-in-residence program (the longest lasting of its kind in Canada) at the
University of Alberta, I have taken it upon myself to interview as many former
University of Alberta writers-in-residence as possible [see the ongoing list of writers, as well as information on the upcoming anniversary event, here]. See the link to the entire series of interviews (updating weekly) here.
Fred Wah
was born in Swift Current, Saskatchewan in 1939, but he grew up in the West
Kootenay region of British Columbia. He studied music and English literature at
the University of British Columbia in the early 1960's where he was one of the
founding editors of the poetry newsletter TISH.
After graduate work in literature and linguistics at the University of New
Mexico in Albuquerque and the State University of New York at Buffalo, he
returned to the Kootenays in the late 1960’s where he taught at Selkirk College
and was the founding coordinator of the writing program at David Thompson
University Centre. He retired from the University of Calgary in 2003 and now
lives in Vancouver. He has been editorially involved with a number of literary
magazines over the years, such as Open
Letter and West Coast Line. His
work has been awarded the Governor General’s Award, Alberta’s Stephanson Award
for Poetry and Howard O’Hagan Award for Short Fiction, the Gabrielle Roy Prize
for Writing on Canadian Literature, and B.C.’s Dorothy Livesay Prize for
Poetry. He was Parliamentary Poet Laureate 2011-2013 and he was made an Officer
of the Order of Canada in 2013. He has published over 20 books of poetry and
prose. Recent books include Sentenced to Light, his collaborations with visual artists, is a door, a series of poems about hybridity, and a selected, The False Laws of Narrative, edited by
Louis Cabri. A recent collaboration, High
Muck a Muck: Playing Chinese, An Interactive Poem, is available online
(http://highmuckamuck.ca/). His current project involves the Columbia River. Scree: The Collected Earlier Poems, 1962-1991 was published by Talonbooks in the fall of 2015.
He was writer-in-residence at the University of
Alberta during the 1988-89 academic year.
Q: When you began your residency, you’d been publishing
books for nearly two decades. Where did you feel you were in your writing? What
did the opportunity mean to you?
A: 88-89, 25 years ago. Dredge. Most
remembered: Pauline picking me up at airport September 26 after flight from
Vancouver and telling me that bp had died during his operation the previous
day. That was pretty hard. beep and I had taught together that summer in Red
Deer where had egged me on to try writing some prose. “Start with the Pulp
3-day novel contest” he said. First thing I did in Edmonton was that, on Labour
Day weekend. Managed about 60 pages of what later became the biofiction Diamond Grill. I remember Rudy Wiebe’s startled expression on the Tuesday morning
when I told him that I’d written a novel over the weekend. That year was a
transition year for us, from B.C. to Alberta, since I had accepted a job at the
University of Calgary to begin the summer of ’89. I was intrigued by the sudden
shift in our lives, from rural to urban, from the Kootenays to the prairies,
from a very local address to a more academic discourse. And the year free of
teaching and exploring writer-in-residence connections was invigorating. We had
access to a wonderful community of intellectuals with whom we socialized and
collaborated, a writing community that included astute artists like Doug Barbour, Greg Hollingshead, and Janice Williamson. The Salmon Rushdie affair
blew up that fall and my writing around that engaged me with faculty in Graphic
Arts like Peter Bartl and Jorge Frascara. At the time, I felt my writing
attentions were moving in a number of directions. I was also becoming quite
involved in the Writers Union and the growing interest in and awareness of
race, supplemented through intense coffee yaks with Myrna Kostash. While I
still felt grounded in a geographical sensibility in my poetry, I was trying to
apprehend the possibilities of writing prose and prose-poetry through working
on Diamond Grill and being able to play with some visual artists. The
opportunity of the residency was, for me, a welcome opportunity to explore new
forms and ideas and relish the energy of an intelligent and vibrant community.
Q: Was this your first residency?
A: No. Daphne Marlatt and I shared a residency at the
University of Manitoba 1982-83 (her in ‘82 and me in ‘83). And then I did SFU
in 2004-05 (I think).
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