fiction Archives | Research & Innovation /research/tag/fiction/ Wed, 29 Jan 2025 19:50:01 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Professor Arthur Redding publishes book about American ghosts /research/2011/10/21/professor-arthur-redding-publishes-book-about-american-ghosts-2/ Fri, 21 Oct 2011 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/10/21/professor-arthur-redding-publishes-book-about-american-ghosts-2/ Haints: American Ghosts, Millennial Passions, and Contemporary Gothic Fictions, a new book by the chair of 91亚色鈥檚 Department of English, Art Redding, will launch next Wednesday. Published by the University of Alabama Press, Haints (see YFile, Sept. 14) examines the work of contemporary American authors who draw on the gothic tradition in their fiction, not […]

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Haints: American Ghosts, Millennial Passions, and Contemporary Gothic Fictions, a new book by the chair of 91亚色鈥檚 Department of English, Art Redding, will launch next Wednesday.

Published by the University of Alabama Press, Haints (see YFile, Sept. 14) examines the work of contemporary American authors who draw on the gothic tradition in their fiction, not as frivolous or supernatural entertainments, but to explore and memorialize the ghosts of their heritage.

The launch will take place Oct. 26, from 3 to 5pm, in the Founders Senior Common Room, 305 Founders College, Keele campus. Everyone is welcome to attend. Refreshments will be provided.

Ghosts, Redding argues, serve as lasting witnesses to the legacies of slaves and indigenous peoples whose stories were lost in the remembrance or mistranslation of history. No matter how much Americans willingly or unwillingly repress the truth of their ancestry, their ghosts remain unburied and restless.

Left: Art Redding

Redding, a professor in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, currently teaches Contemporary American Gothic. He has written about various American literary and cultural figures, from Emma Goldman to Kathy Acker.聽He is the author of Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War (University Press of Mississippi, 2008) and Raids on Human Consciousness: Writing, Anarchism, and Violence (University of South Carolina Press, 1998).

The event is sponsored by the 91亚色 Bookstore and Founders College.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.

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PhD candidate Kathleen Cummins examines film and TV interpretations of Jane Eyre /research/2010/11/08/phd-candidate-kathleen-cummins-examines-film-and-tv-interpretations-of-jane-eyre-2/ Mon, 08 Nov 2010 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/11/08/phd-candidate-kathleen-cummins-examines-film-and-tv-interpretations-of-jane-eyre-2/ Over 150 years after it was first published, Charlotte Bront毛鈥檚 1847 novel Jane Eyre remains a favourite for film and television adaptations. But what influences and interpretations are at work before it hits the screen? 91亚色 women's studies PhD candidate Kathleen Cummins (BA Spec. Hons. 鈥92, MFA 鈥95) will talk on Thursday about 鈥淭he Perils […]

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Over 150 years after it was first published, Charlotte Bront毛鈥檚 1847 novel Jane Eyre remains a favourite for film and television adaptations. But what influences and interpretations are at work before it hits the screen? 91亚色 women's studies PhD candidate Kathleen Cummins (BA Spec. Hons. 鈥92, MFA 鈥95) will talk on Thursday about 鈥The Perils of Adapting Jane! Her Further (Mis)adventures in the Land of Film and Television".

The talk will take place on Nov. 11, from 7 to 10pm in N201 Ross Building, Keele campus.

There have been at least 26 film or television English-language adaptations of and a new adaptation is currently in the works. It would seem that both producers and audiences never tire of Bront毛鈥檚 classic novel.

Cummins, a filmmaker whose doctoral work specializes in feminist film and filmmakers, will examine how the gender relations and sexual politics of Bront毛鈥檚 proto-feminist text have been re-interpreted and represented in four different adaptations over a 50-year period.

Integrating adaptation studies and feminist theory, her analysis will consider the impact of paratextual factors such as history and market forces, including star personas and studio/network brands, on media producers鈥 fidelity to Bront毛鈥檚 vision.

Cummins work has been screened and broadcast internationally. She has written for magazines about film, and her most recent publication is a peer-reviewed chapter in , published by Wilfred Laurier Press. Currently, she teaches courses in the Media Fundamentals Program at Sheridan College Institute for Advanced Learning & Technology.

Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.

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Professors Michael Helm & Priscila Uppal to share International Festival of Authors stage with 91亚色 alumni /research/2010/10/21/professors-michael-helm-priscila-uppal-to-share-international-festival-of-authors-stage-with-york-alumni-2/ Thu, 21 Oct 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/10/21/professors-michael-helm-priscila-uppal-to-share-international-festival-of-authors-stage-with-york-alumni-2/ The 31st International Festival of Authors (IFOA) has started and several 91亚色 professors and alumni are on the bill. 91亚色 alumnus Jian Ghomeshi (right) (BA 鈥95) of CBC Radio will host and moderate 鈥淐elebrating 40 Years of the Juno Awards鈥, which will launch the new book Music from Far and Wide: Celebrating 40 Years of […]

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The 31st International Festival of Authors (IFOA) has started and several 91亚色 professors and alumni are on the bill.

91亚色 alumnus (right) (BA 鈥95) of CBC Radio will host and moderate 鈥淐elebrating 40 Years of the Juno Awards鈥, which will launch the new book Music from Far and Wide: Celebrating 40 Years of the Juno Awards (Key Porter Books, 2010) Saturday, Oct. 23 at 9pm at the IFOA. The event will feature three of the book鈥檚 co-authors Karen Bliss, Nick Krewen and Jason Schneider, along with special guests Jim Cuddy of Blue Rodeo 鈥 who wrote the book鈥檚 foreword 鈥 singer-songwriter Dan Hill and musician Emm Gryner.

The following day, another 91亚色 alumnus (BA Spec. Hons. 鈥81) will be at the IFOA as one of three authors participating in The Word Doctors Are In: Master Class on Sunday, Oct. 24 at 11am. Ricci will speak about 鈥淲hat Every Writer Should Know鈥.

Poet and 91亚色 creative writing alumna (Hons. BA 鈥00), editor of The Selected Gwendolyn MacEwen (Exile Editions, 2007) and author of the poetry collection Junkman's Daughter (Exile Editions, 2004), will read from her latest collection A Good Time Had by All (Exile Editions, 2010). Strimas, who works at Quill & Quire magazine and for the University of Guelph's Master of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing, will read on Sunday, Oct. 24 at 1pm and again on Friday, Oct. 29 at 8pm.

91亚色 English Professor (left) will read from his latest book, , Wednesday, Oct. 27 at 8pm, along with the other finalists for the Rogers Writers鈥 Trust Fiction Prize.

91亚色 English Professor (right) will be part of a roundtable discussion with IFOA Ontario in Milton Wednesday, Oct. 27, and will read from her newest work Friday, Oct. 29 at 8pm at the IFOA in Toronto.

The IFOA will once again bring writers of contemporary world literature for 11 days of readings, interviews, lectures, round table discussions and public book signings from Oct. 20 to 30.

For more information, visit the website. You can or call the Harbourfront Centre Box Office at 416-973-4000.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin

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91亚色 researchers respond to New 91亚色 Times book review to defend Great Ape Trust's scientific integrity /research/2010/10/19/york-researchers-respond-to-new-york-times-book-review-to-defend-great-ape-trusts-scientific-integrity-2/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/10/19/york-researchers-respond-to-new-york-times-book-review-to-defend-great-ape-trusts-scientific-integrity-2/ Ten academics, including James Benson and William Greaves, professors emeriti at Glendon College, and Stuart Shanker, distinguished research professor in philosophy & psychology in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Health and director of the Milton and Ethel Harris Research Initiative, wrote a letter to The New 91亚色 Times' Sunday Book Review section聽Oct. 17 in which they respond […]

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Ten academics, including and , professors emeriti at Glendon College, and , distinguished research professor in philosophy & psychology in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Health and director of the , wrote in which they respond to a review essay that compared a fictional account of bonobos (Sara Gruen鈥檚 Ape House) with a nonfiction book on apes (Jon Cohen鈥檚 Almost Chimpanzee):

In her essay (Sept. 12), Jennifer Schuessler concocts a peculiar mash-up. The pairing of a fictional account of bonobos (Sara Gruen鈥檚 ) with a nonfiction book on apes (Jon Cohen鈥檚 鈥淎lmost Chimpanzee鈥) makes some sense; Gruen grounded her novel in visits to real-life bonobos at the Great Ape Trust in Iowa, a place also visited by Cohen.

But lest readers be led astray, we wish to clarify that the Great Ape Trust is in no way connected with Marc Hauser, the Harvard scientist mentioned in the essay who has been accused of falsifying data in his primate studies. For those with serious interest about the research into the language abilities of bonobos, extensive video documentation is freely available on the Internet, including material at .

We are scientists who have worked closely with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh and her colleagues at the , and/or have observed and interacted with the bonobos. We teach and write about the work impugned in the Book Review 鈥 because we respect its scientific integrity, because it has powerfully transformed our understanding of what apes are capable of, and because, through it, we grasp more fully what it means to share our world with other sentient creatures.

Benson and Greaves, members of Glendon鈥檚 , traveled to the United States to meet with earlier this year.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin

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Third novel by English prof wrestles with what people believe /research/2010/05/11/third-novel-by-english-prof-wrestles-with-what-people-believe-2/ Tue, 11 May 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/05/11/third-novel-by-english-prof-wrestles-with-what-people-believe-2/ 91亚色 English Professor Michael Helm likens writing novels to driving bumper to bumper at 120 kilometres an hour for half a day, and being emotionally and physically spent by the end. That鈥檚 on good days. 鈥淵ou have to concentrate so hard, but when you get out of the car, you鈥檙e just so exhausted. I always […]

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91亚色 English Professor likens writing novels to driving bumper to bumper at 120 kilometres an hour for half a day, and being emotionally and physically spent by the end. That鈥檚 on good days.

鈥淵ou have to concentrate so hard, but when you get out of the car, you鈥檙e just so exhausted. I always find it聽physically draining,鈥 says Helm, author of the recently published , already number eight on the聽. Helm will read from his new book at Toronto鈥檚 Festival of Arts & Creativity June 12.

Left: Michael Helm. Photo by Alexandra Rockingham.

On bad days,聽Helm says, he聽might suddenly think the manuscript he just spent the last seven months working on is boring, 鈥渓ike I was just plodding along鈥. He has to go back and figure out where he took a wrong turn, made a wrong choice. In the end, it usually works out, but it鈥檚 a process punctuated by crises.

Take his new book. After rewriting the first 80 or so single-spaced pages five times, he realized it was becoming a very different story, faster paced, than what he wanted, 鈥渢he kind of novel I might have written 12 years ago.聽It wasn't a novel I鈥檇 even necessarily want to read anymore,鈥 says Helm, an editor at the literary journal from 1991 to 1998 and co-editor for magazine since 2003. The main character had to go, that much was clear 鈥撀爃e was taking over the story. 鈥淭he draft that wasn't working had a lot of frenetic energy and I needed a book that was slower, but still had dramatic tension 鈥 sort of a slower drawing of the story.鈥

After all, Helm is not the same man he was when his first novel, the Giller Prize-nominated made its surprising debut. Until that point, Helm hadn't published a short story or a poem.

Now, Helm聽has聽written his third聽novel, Cities of Refuge, which takes place in Toronto, a multicultural, cosmopolitan city Helm no longer lives in, but still enjoys for its energy. The problem with trying to write a particular kind of book is the intuitive part of the process doesn鈥檛 always cooperate, at least initially, and certainly not the way Helm approaches it. 鈥淚 usually don鈥檛 know where the story is going,鈥 he says. It evolves as he goes. He gets in for the ride and hangs on, never knowing where it's going to stop.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e doing a good job, it starts to form into recognizable shapes and wholenesses with understructures as you recognize things there you hadn鈥檛 realized were there. And that鈥檚 a sign you鈥檙e doing something right.鈥

It can't be rushed, though. It requires taking the聽elements of the novel聽"as far out as you can until it starts to break apart and you go through a crisis and if you come through that crisis then you鈥檒l see a different thing and聽you鈥檒l see it better,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ne of the tasks of writers, whether we鈥檙e talking about narrative or character, is to take seeming certainties and to drive them into doubt, to the farthest reaches that you can and make them start to break apart. Though it鈥檚 no fun when the book does come to a big crisis and you think 鈥極h no, I got this dead wrong鈥.鈥

But to create great fiction, risk is part of the process, as is doubt. And so to get to the story he wanted, he had to elevate his two secondary characters to main billing and give them space to develop without really knowing where they would take him. As it turned out, Kim Lystrander, a 28-year-old PhD dropout volunteering at a local agency that helps refugee claimants聽who have been rejected, and her father Harold, a professor of Latin American history with an undetermined past, wanted to further explore a familiar theme 鈥 belief. Helm hadn鈥檛 realized at the time that the theme was also present in his last novel and to a lesser extent in his first.

It's about "the investment we make in different kinds of stories, and those can be personal stories, national stories, religious mythic narratives, the things we find meaningful and why do we find them meaningful, and what happens when those stories turn out not to be worthy of our investment," he says. "One question that I think the new book asks is, 鈥榗an a thinking, thoughtful person, embrace old beliefs about story鈥, which is to say our seemingly fundamental shared instinct, a need to believe, a need to believe things that we can鈥檛 always know with certainty have validity."

In Cities of Refuge, Harold, who divorced his wife and abandoned Kim, is forced to confront his dark, unknown past, his beliefs, after the violent attempted rape of his daughter, and聽becomes obsessed with finding her assailant. Similarly, Kim suddenly doubts those things she once cleaved to as truths; all that has been stripped away. But as Kim gains strength and clarity, Harold falters.

鈥淗e鈥檚 a guy who鈥檚 perpetually contorted so as not to see what鈥檚 right in front of him. He doesn鈥檛 want to stare at the truth of his life, who he is and how he has behaved in the face of brute power in the past,鈥 says Helm.聽Whereas Kim contains a "perceptive imagination and she understands him to a degree that he would never understand himself." And their relationship takes on different hues and rhythms in the aftermath.

As Helm says, most people鈥檚 characters are fully formed by the time they're adults and they have a good sense of themselves. The trick then is to discover 鈥渨hat we believe and why we鈥檙e messed up the way we鈥檙e messed up鈥.

Acting director of 91亚色鈥檚 Creative Writing Program, Helm is also the author of , a finalist for the regional Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Book and the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize.

Currently, Helm is working on a short novel, under 150 pages, that he is trying his best not to complicate, as he says, crazily.

By Sandra McLean, YFile writer.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.

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Professor Michael Helm interviewed and reviewed about his new novel /research/2010/04/27/professor-michael-helm-interviewed-and-reviewed-about-his-new-novel-2/ Tue, 27 Apr 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/04/27/professor-michael-helm-interviewed-and-reviewed-about-his-new-novel-2/ Michael Helm, assistant professor of English in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, has published his third novel, Cities of Refuge. His is the author of The Projectionist, which was a Scotiabank Giller Prize finalist, and In the Place of Last Things, a regional Commonwealth Writers鈥 Prize for Best Book. The Globe & […]

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, assistant professor of English in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, has published his third novel, . His is the author of , which was a Scotiabank Giller Prize finalist, and , a regional Commonwealth Writers鈥 Prize for Best Book.

The Globe & Mail April 23. Helm was also interviewed:

Q: Where did the idea for this book come from?

I know exactly where the last two books started, the sentence or image they stared with, but this one has been torn down and built back up again so many times I don't think there's any original lumber left in it. For a long time, I wanted to write about Toronto because it's the place I've lived the longest and I am interested in cities of this size ... open cities in this moment.

Q: What is this moment?

Well, the start of the 21st century, the open city, for the usual reasons people find a city interesting, the mix of histories and stories and languages, the surfaces of the place, the so-called erotics of public spaces. But also because I also think it's true that almost anything can count as character in fiction, in the way that landscape can be character in Thomas Hardy. And I think cities sort of work in fiction the way people do, that they have an outward part of themselves that is a promotion of a mythology and a much more interesting and richer interior. And I know the city, I think I know it pretty well and have enough intuitions about it as well. It's full of dramatic possibilities, I think.

The complete is available on the Globe's Web site.

The Toronto Star also on April 27:

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how marketable or sexy it is, but I think of it as a book about different kinds of belief,鈥 says Helm, who will read from the novel Wednesday at Harbourfront Centre on a program that also features Russell Smith and Erin Moure.

鈥淚 wanted a book that was pleasurable on every level and, for me as a reader, one of those levels is a book that slightly resists easy understanding. There鈥檚 always more than one thing happening at a time, on the level of character, tone or language. I find that very pleasurable when I read.鈥

Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, research communications officer.

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