The Massey Lectures is an annual five-part series of lectures given in Canada by distinguished writers, thinkers, and scholars who explore important ideas and issues of contemporary interest.[1] Created in 1961 in honour of Vincent Massey, a former Governor General of Canada, it is widely regarded as one of the most acclaimed lecture series in the country.
Prior to 1989, the lectures were recorded for broadcast in a CBC Radio studio in Toronto. From 1989 to 2002, the lectures were delivered before a live audience at the University of Toronto. Since 2002, the lectures have been presented and recorded for broadcast at public events in five different cities across Canada.[4]
The lectures are broadcast each November on Ideas and published simultaneously in book form by House of Anansi Press.[5]
Many of the lectures can be listened to online on the Ideas website, while others can be purchased on various sites.[6]
In addition to the print version for each individual year, several of the earlier lectures are available in compilations, including The Lost Massey Lectures.[7]
1961 – Barbara Ward, The Rich Nations and the Poor Nations
2021 – Esi Edugyan, Out of the Sun: On Art, Race and the Future[20]
2022 – Tomson Highway, Laughing with the Trickster: On Sex, Death and Accordions[21]
2023 – Astra Taylor, The Age of Insecurity: Coming Together as Things Fall Apart
2024 – Ian Williams, What I Mean To Say: Remaking Conversation in our Time[22]
Notes
For Lawrence Hill's Massey Lectures in 2013, the CBC Radio website featured a visual narrative to accompany that year's theme Blood: The Stuff of Life. The story included full-screen images of blood, animations that visually demonstrated historical attitudes towards blood and videos of people affected culturally by it.
1996 did not feature a lecture because Ideas producers and the selected Lecturer Robert Theobald could not agree on an appropriate manuscript for the programme.[23] The theme was to have been on the future of work. Theobald later published his manuscript as Reworking Success: New Communities at the Millennium (1997).[24]