Poet Laureate Map of Canada
Who was the first provincial or territorial poet laureate?

PJ Johnson was formally invested as the Yukon Territory’s first Poet Laureate on July 1, 1994.

Glen Sorestad, poet and publisher, was named Poet Laureate of the Province of Saskatchewan in 2000.
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2010 Griffin Poetry Prize Winners

2010 Canadian and International winners of the tenth annual Griffin Poetry Prize. [details]
My readers are my real countries.
Goran Simic
Translations of Misunderstandings
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Poet Laureate Map of Canada

Map Candice James - Poet Laureate of New Westminster, B.C. Roger Nash, Sudbury, Ontario Jill Battson, Cobourg, Ontario pj johnson, Poet Laureate of the Yukon Kristan Anderson, Owen Sound Ontario Roland Pemberton - Poet Laureate of Edmonton, AlbertaBrad Cran - Poet Laureate of Vancouver, B.C. Poet Laureate of Newfoundland: Agnes Walsh Linda Rogers - Poet Laureate of Victoria, B.C. Douglas Lochhead, Sackville, New Brunswick Shauntay Grant - Poet Laureate of Halifax, Nova Scotia John B. Lee, Brantford Ontario Dionne Brand, Toronto, Ontario Pierre DesRuisseaux - Parliamentary Poet Laureate - Ottawa Hugh MacDonald, Prince Edward Island Robert Currie, Poet Laureate of Saskatchewan Gary Hyland, Poet Laureate, City of Moose Jaw, SK Poet Laureate of Cobalt Ann Margetson

Dionne Brand

Dionne Brand

Poet Laureate of Toronto, Ontario
  2009 - 2011

Internationally acclaimed Toronto-based poet and novelist Dionne Brand has been appointed by City Council as Toronto's third Poet Laureate. Ms. Brand will receive an annual honorarium of $10,000 for three years to serve as Toronto's literary ambassador championing local literary arts and wordsmiths. She will also create a literary legacy project for the people of Toronto.

Mayor David Miller says of her appointment, "I am thrilled to see one of Toronto’s most distinguished writers serve in this important role. Ms Brand's impressive body of work covers a range of issues and topics on community and cultural diversity. Her passion to tell Toronto stories to the world should serve as an inspiration to all Torontonians."

Ms Brand has published nine volumes of poetry including No Language is Neutral, short listed for the Governor General's Award; Land To Light On winner of the Governor General's Award and the Trillium Book Award, thirsty, winner of the Pat Lowther Award and a finalist for the Trillium Book Award and the Griffin Poetry Prize and most recently Inventory, a finalist for the Governor General's Award. Her poetry has been translated in Italian and French and is published in Canada, the U.S., U.K., Italy and Germany. Ms Brand is also a novelist winning the Toronto Book Award for her novel What We All Long For in 2006. Also in 2006 she was awarded the Harbourfront Festival Prize, an award honouring individuals who have made a substantial contribution to the world of books and writing.
Ms Brand says of her new appointment, “It is an honour to be the Poet Laureate of Toronto. I have a great passion for this city, in it's multiplicity it is constantly rich and surprising. I've written this about it in thirsty - that wild waiting at traffic lights off the end of the world, where nothing is simple, nothing, in the city there is no simple love or simple fidelity, the heart is slippery”.
Ms Brand's work is internationally known and taught. The great American poet Adrienne Rich called her "a cultural critic of uncompromising courage, an artist in language and ideas, an intellectual conscience for her country." The Italian theorist Franca Bernabei has said of her work "Brand's poetic production reveals a remarkable variety of formal-stylistic strategies and semantic richness as well as the ongoing pursuit of a voice and a language that embody her political, affective, and aesthetic engagement with the human condition." Ms Brand has written passionately about Toronto and Canada in her works throughout her career. The city and its citizens are the focus in the poems of thirsty, while the experience of new Canadians is a central theme within the poems of Land To Light On and No Language is Neutral.

Born in 1953, Ms. Brand moved to Canada from Trinidad when she was 17 to attend the University of Toronto, where she earned a Bachelor's degree in Philosophy and English and a Masters degree in the Philosophy of Education. She is currently a Professor of English in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph. She has contributed to seventeen anthologies, written dozens of essays and articles, and made four documentary films for the National Film Board. Ossuaries, Ms. Brand's next collection of poems, will be published next year by McClelland and Stewart.

 
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© 2010 Owen Sound and North Grey Union Public Library | All Rights Reserved