Past Event! Note: this event has already taken place.

George Elliot Clarke Lecture

March 8, 2017 — March 9, 2017
Time: 2:30 PM — 4:00 PM

Location:2017 Dunton Tower
Audience:Carleton Community

George Elliot Clarke is the current Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate. His work largely explores and chronicles the experience and history of Black Canadian communities of NS and NB, creating a cultural geography that Clarke refers to as “Africadia” (source: Wikipedia).

Poetry Reading and Performance

Wednesday, March 8th, 7:30 PM

This will be a performative event at the Great Canadian Theatre Company, 1233 Wellington Street West).

Lecture

Thursday, March 9th, 2:30-4:00 PM

“From ‘Coloured’ and ‘Negro’ and ‘Black’ to ‘Africadian’ and ‘Afro-Metis’: The Black-Ink Odyssey of George Elliott Clarke.”

Where: Dunton Tower 2017, Carleton University

Co-hosted by the Dept. of English.

Biography

A revered poet, George Elliott Clarke was born in Windsor, Nova Scotia, near the Black Loyalist community of Three Mile Plains, in 1960. A graduate of the University of Waterloo (B.A., Hons., 1984), Dalhousie University (M.A., 1989) and Queen’s University (Ph.D., 1993), he is now the inaugural E.J. Pratt Professor of Canadian Literature at the University of Toronto. An Assistant Professor of English and Canadian Studies at Duke University, North Carolina (1994-99), Clarke also served as the Seagrams Visiting Chair in Canadian Studies at McGill University (1998-99), and as a Noted Scholar at the University of British Columbia (2002) and as a Visiting Scholar at Mount Allison University (2005), and as the William Lyon Mackenzie King Visiting Professor in Canadian Studies at Harvard University (2013-14). He has also worked as a research, editor, social worker, parliamentary aide, and newspaper columnist. He lives in Toronto, Ontario, but he also owns land in Nova Scotia.

His many honours include the Portia White Prize for Artistic Achievement (1998), Governor-General’s Award for Poetry (2001), the National Magazine Gold Medal for Poetry (2001), the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award (2004), the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Fellowship Prize (2005), the Dartmouth Book Award for Fiction (2006), the Eric Hoffer Book Award for Poetry (2009), appointment to the Order of Nova Scotia (2006), appointment to the Order of Canada at the rank of Officer (2008), and eight honorary doctorates. He has recently completed his three year term as the City of Toronto’s Poet Laureate.
George Elliot Clarke