词条 | François Ricard |
释义 |
| name = François Ricard | birth_name = | image = | birth_date = June 4, 1947 | birth_place = Shawinigan, Quebec | occupation = writer, academic | period = 1980s-present | nationality = Canadian | notableworks = La littérature contre elle-même, Gabrielle Roy, une vie | awards = Governor General's Award for French-language non-fiction Drainie-Taylor Biography Prize | spouse = | website = }} François Ricard (born June 4, 1947 in Shawinigan, Quebec)[1] is a Canadian writer and academic from Quebec.[2] He has been a professor of French literature at McGill University since 1980, including a special but not exclusive focus on the work of Milan Kundera and Gabrielle Roy,[1] and has published numerous works of non-fiction. BackgroundBorn and raised in Shawinigan, he was educated at McGill University and the University of Provence.[1] He was a founder of the literary journal Liberté,[1] has served on the editorial boards of the publishing houses Éditions Sentier and Éditions du Boréal,[1] and has contributed to both Radio-Canada and Télé-Québec as a literature reviewer and a host of documentary programming on Quebec literature and history.[1] AwardsHe won the Governor General's Award for French-language non-fiction at the 1985 Governor General's Awards for La littérature contre elle-même,[2] and Gabrielle Roy: A Life, an English translation by Patricia Claxton of his 1996 book Gabrielle Roy, une vie, won the 1999 Drainie-Taylor Biography Prize[3] and the Governor General's Award for French to English translation at the 1999 Governor General's Awards.[4] The original French edition of Gabrielle Roy, une vie was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award at the 1997 Governor General's Awards,[5] and Le dernier après-midi d’Agnès: essai sur l’oeuvre de Milan Kundera was nominated at the 2003 Governor General's Awards.[6] Works
References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 François Ricard at The Canadian Encyclopedia. 2. ^1 "François Ricard: comme une grande province tranquille". La Presse, March 22, 2014. 3. ^"Ricard wins biography prize". National Post, November 10, 1999. 4. ^"Winners of 1999 Governor General's Literary Awards". Ottawa Citizen, November 17, 1999. 5. ^"The Governor General's Awards". Vancouver Sun, October 23, 1997. 6. ^"Atwood's novel gets third citation". The Globe and Mail, October 21, 2003. External links
22 : 1947 births|Living people|20th-century Canadian non-fiction writers|20th-century Canadian male writers|21st-century Canadian poets|Canadian essayists|Canadian biographers|Male biographers|Canadian non-fiction writers in French|Writers from Quebec|People from Shawinigan|McGill University faculty|20th-century biographers|21st-century biographers|Canadian male poets|Male essayists|McGill University alumni|20th-century essayists|21st-century essayists|Governor General's Award-winning non-fiction writers|21st-century Canadian male writers|Canadian male non-fiction writers |
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