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Stan Dragland

Canadian novelist (1942–2022) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Stanley Louis Dragland CM (December 2, 1942 – August 2, 2022) was a Canadian novelist, poet and literary critic.[1] A longtime professor of English literature at the University of Western Ontario,[2] he was most noted for his 1994 critical study Floating Voice: Duncan Campbell Scott and the Literature of Treaty 9, which played a key role in the contemporary reevaluation of the legacy of poet Duncan Campbell Scott in light of his role as deputy superintendent of the Department of Indian Affairs.[3]

Quick Facts Stan Dragland CM, Born ...
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Career

Born and raised in Calgary, Alberta, Dragland was educated at the University of Alberta and Queen's University.[1] While teaching at Western, he was a founder of the poetry publisher Brick Books and the literary magazine Brick.[4]

His first novel, Peckertracks, was a shortlisted finalist for the Books in Canada First Novel Award.[1] He won the Newfoundland and Labrador Rogers Cable Non-Fiction Award in 2005 for his memoir Apocrypha: Further Journeys,[5] and he was a shortlisted finalist for the E. J. Pratt Poetry Award in 2007 for Stormy Weather: Foursomes.[1]

He wrote the forewords for the New Canadian Library editions of Scott's In the Village of Viger and Other Stories and Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers.

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Personal life

During his academic career he was married to Marnie Parsons, a fellow professor at Western.[6] The couple later separated. After his retirement, Dragland moved to St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador,[7] where he continued his writing career and remarried to Beth Follett, the publisher of Pedlar Press.[8]

Dragland was made a member of the Order of Canada in 2021.[9] Dragland died in Trinity, Newfoundland and Labrador during a hike on August 2, 2022, at the age of 79.[10]

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Books

  • Wilson MacDonald's Western Tour, 1923-4 (1975)[1]
  • Peckertracks (1978)[1]
  • Approaches to the Work of James Reaney (1983)
  • Simon Jesse's Journey (1983)[11]
  • Journeys Through Bookland (1985)[12]
  • The Bees of the Invisible (1991)[11]
  • Floating Voice: Duncan Campbell Scott and the Literature of Treaty 9 (Anansi, 1994) ISBN 0887845517
  • New Life in Dark Seas (2000)
  • 12 Bars (2002)[11]
  • Apocrypha: Further Journeys (2003)[5]
  • Stormy Weather: Foursomes (2005)[13]
  • Hard-Headed and Big-Hearted: Writing Newfoundland (2006)[14]
  • The Drowned Lands (2008)[15]
  • Deep Too (2013)
  • The Bricoleur and His Sentences (2014)
  • Witness: Poetry and Prose of Joanne Page (2015)
  • Strangers & Others: Newfoundland Essays (Pedlar Press, 2015) ISBN 9781897141700
  • Strangers & Others: The Great Eastern (Pedlar Press, 2016) ISBN 978-1-897141-77-9
  • Gerald Squires (2017)[16]
  • James Reaney On the Grid (Porcupine's Quill, 2022) ISBN 9780889844520

References

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