Acadian author honoured for 50-year career
29.08.2008 21:02
Arts
- Source: cbc.ca
Antonine Maillet's novels focus on Acadian culture.(CBC)The 50-year publishing career of a New Brunswick author was honoured in Moncton as she launched her new book on Friday. Antonine Maillet's new book, Le mystrieux voyage de Rien, was released on Friday with a launch at Moncton's Capitol Theatre. "It's just like before giving birth to a new child," said the 79-year-old author. 'The Acadians have decided to remain alive'—Antonine Maillet, authorMaillet is being honoured at a three-day conference at Universit de Moncton for her contributions to Canadian literature. Scholars from Japan, Sweden, Slovakia, India, Brazil, the United States and Canada have converged at the university to pay tribute to the author who has been recognized as the first person to take the oral language of the Acadians and turn it into literature. The Bouctouche native has written 40 books of which Plagie-la-Charrette is the best known. The novel allowed her to become the first non-European to win France's top literary prize, the Prix Goncourt. Represents minoritiesMini Nanda, who is attending the conference from the University of Rajasthan in India, said Maillet's work also reflects the experience of minorities in her country. "What is common to both of them is their sense of deep empathy, love and concern for their own community — a community that is marginalized, a community whose language and culture is threatened by the central forces," Nanda said. The books give a voice to the people who are suppressed or silenced in society, Nanda said. "The writers are struggling to keep the rich oral tradition alive," she said. Birgitta Brown, from Goteborgs University in Sweden, said she first discovered Maillet's work in 1979 and decided to do her doctoral thesis on the author. "From my point of view she's the finest Canadian writer," Brown said. Maillet said she is honoured by the attention her work is getting and that she has no plans to stop writing. "It always surprises me that I'm still there, still writing and still enjoying it more and more," she said. 'My own vision of the world'Maillet's father told her when she graduated from university it would be the day she'd realize that she didn't know much about the world. He also told her not to compare herself to anyone else, she said. "There was no way for me to compete. I had to find my own vision of the world," she said. It's the role of literature to tell universal stories so that people can unite for a better world, she said. Writing about Acadian culture is a way of keeping the society alive, she said, crediting artists for ensuring that Acadia has continued to live on. "The Acadians have decided to remain alive," she said. "Acadia is beginning to be more and more the best of itself." Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACKRelatedInternal LinksCBC ARCHIVES: Antonine Maillet, Acadian AvengerArts HeadlinesAcadian author honoured for 50-year careerThe 50-year publishing career of a New Brunswick author was honoured in Moncton as she launched her new book on Friday.'Best is yet to come' as Michael Jackson turns 50Michael Jackson marked a personal milestone Friday: his 50th birthday.Banksy hits New Orleans on Katrina anniversaryAs New Orleans watches the movement of potential hurricane Gustav, another force has hit its yet-to-recover neighbourhoods — the street artist Banksy.Cirque debuts permanent show in opulent Macau hotel casinoCanadian-born phenomenon Cirque du Soleil has opened the doors on its first permanent production in Asia, premiering its new show Zaia in Macau on Thursday.Stuntwoman known for Gone With the Wind scene dies Hazel Warp, a skilled horsewoman who was Vivien Leigh's stunt double in Gone With the Wind, has died. She was 93. Arts FeaturesRogue agentDon Cheadle plays a shadowy operative in the espionage thriller TraitorInconvenient truthsTen things I learned from watching disaster moviesIran's gay planA documentary explores Iran's "solution" for homosexuality A bug's lifeMontreal author Rawi Hage explains his menacing new novel, CockroachCrashing the partyPolitical conventions have provided some memorable movie scenesSilly rabbitThe House Bunny: funnier and (slightly) less sexist than it looksPeople who read this also read …
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