Margaret Atwood



Margaret Eleanor "Peggy" Atwood, CC, O.Ont, FRSC (born November 18, 1939) is a Canadian poet, novelist, literary critic, essayist, and environmental activist. While she may be best known for her work as a novelist, she is also a proficient poet, having published 15 books of poetry to date.

Many of her poems have been inspired by myths and fairy tales, which have been interests of hers from an early age. Atwood has published short stories in Tamarack Review, Alphabet, Harper's, CBC Anthology, Ms., Saturday Night, and many other magazines. She has also published four collections of stories and three collections of unclassifiable short prose works.

She is among the most-honoured authors of fiction in recent history; she is a winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award and Prince of Asturias award for Literature, has been shortlisted for the Booker Prize five times, winning once, and has been a finalist for the Governor General's Awards seven times, winning twice.

Early life
Born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Atwood is the second of three children of Margaret Dorothy (nÃ©e Killam), a former dietitian and nutritionist, and Carl Edmund Atwood, an entomologist. Due to her father's ongoing research in forest entomology, Atwood spent much of her childhood in the backwoods of Northern Quebec and back and forth between Ottawa, Sault Ste. Marie, and Toronto. She did not attend school full-time until she was in eighth grade. She became a voracious reader of literature, Dell pocketbook mysteries, Grimm's Fairy Tales, Canadian animal stories, and comic books. She attended Leaside High School in Leaside, Toronto and graduated in 1957.

Atwood began writing at age six and realized she wanted to write professionally when she was 16. In 1957, she began studying at Victoria College in the University of Toronto. Her professors included Jay Macpherson, and Northrop Frye. She graduated in 1961 with a Bachelor of Arts in English (honours) and minors in philosophy and French.

In late 1961, after winning the E.J. Pratt Medal for her privately printed book of poems, Double Persephone, she began graduate studies at Harvard's Radcliffe College with a Woodrow Wilson fellowship. She obtained a master's degree (MA) from Radcliffe in 1962 and pursued further graduate studies at Harvard University for 2 years, but never finished because she never completed a dissertation on "The English Metaphysical Romance". She has taught at the University of British Columbia (1965), Sir George Williams University in Montreal (1967-68), the University of Alberta (1969-70), York University in Toronto (1971-72), the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa (1985), where she was visiting M.F.A. Chair, and New York University, where she was Berg Professor of English.

Personal life
In 1968, Atwood married Jim Polk; they were divorced in 1973. She formed a relationship with fellow novelist Graeme Gibson soon after and moved to a farm near Alliston, Ontario, north of Toronto. In 1976 their daughter, Eleanor Jess Atwood Gibson, was born. The family returned to Toronto in 1980. She divides her time between Toronto, Pelee Island, Ontario, and northern Quebec.

Chamber opera
In March 2008 it was announced by Atwood that she had accepted her first chamber opera commission. Pauline will be on the subject of Pauline Johnson, a writer and Canadian artist long a subject of fascination to Atwood. It will star Judith Forst, with music by Christos Hatzis, and be produced by City Opera of Vancouver. Pauline will be set in Vancouver, British Columbia in March 1913, in the last week of Johnson's life.

Political involvement
Although Atwood's politics are commonly described as being left wing, she has indicated in interviews that she considers herself a Red Tory in the historical sense of the term. Atwood and her partner Graeme Gibson are members of the Green Party of Canada and strong supporters of GPC leader Elizabeth May. Atwood has strong views on environmental issues, and she and her partner are the Joint Honourary Presidents of the Rare Bird Club within BirdLife International. She has been Chair of the Writers' Union of Canada and President of PEN Canada, and is currently a Vice President of PEN International. In the 2008 federal election she attended a rally for the Bloc QuÃ©bÃ©cois, a Quebec separatist party, because of her support for their position on the arts, and stated that she would vote for the party if she lived in Quebec. In a Globe and Mail editorial, she urged Canadians to vote for any other party to stop a Conservative majority.

During the debate in 1987 over a free trade agreement between Canada and the United States, Atwood spoke out against the deal, including an essay she wrote opposing the agreement.

Atwood celebrated her 70th birthday at a gala dinner at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, marking the final stop of her international tour to promote The Year of the Flood. She stated that she had chosen to attend the event because the city has been home to one of Canada's most ambitious environmental reclamation programs: "When people ask if there's hope (for the environment), I say, if Sudbury can do it, so can you. Having been a symbol of desolation, it's become a symbol of hope."

Despite calls for a boycott by Gazan students, and a request to boycott from PACBI Atwood visited Israel -accepted the $1,000,000 Dan David Prize along with Indian author Amitav Ghosh at Tel Aviv University in May 2010. Atwood commented that "we don't do cultural boycotts".

In the Wake of the Flood, a documentary film by Canadian director Ron Mann released in October 2010, followed Atwood on the unusual book tour for her novel The Year of the Flood. During this innovative book tour, Atwood created a theatrical version of her novel, with performers borrowed from the local areas she was visiting. The documentary is described as "a fly-on-the-wall film verite."

Critical reception
The Economist called her a "scintillating wordsmith" and an "expert literary critic", but commented that her logic does not match her prose in Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth, a book which commences with the conception of debt and its kinship with justice. Atwood claims that this conception is ingrained in the human psyche, manifest as it is in early historical peoples, who matched their conceptions of debt with those of justice as typically exemplified by a female deity. Atwood holds that, with the rise of Ancient Greece, and especially the installation of the court system detailed in Aeschylus's Oresteia, this deity has been replaced by a more thorough conception of debt.

In 2003, Shaftesbury Films produced an anthology series, The Atwood Stories, which dramatized six of Atwood's short stories.

Atwood and science fiction
The Handmaid's Tale received the very first Arthur C. Clarke Award in 1987. The award is given for the best science fiction novel that was first published in the United Kingdom during the previous year. It was also nominated for the 1986 Nebula Award, and the 1987 Prometheus Award, both science fiction awards.

Atwood was at one time offended at the suggestion that The Handmaid's Tale or Oryx and Crake were science fiction, insisting to The Guardian that they were speculative fiction instead: "Science fiction has monsters and spaceships; speculative fiction could really happen." She told the Book of the Month Club: "Oryx and Crake is a speculative fiction, not a science fiction proper. It contains no intergalactic space travel, no teleportation, no Martians." and on BBC Breakfast explained that science fiction, as opposed to what she wrote, was "talking squids in outer space." The latter phrase particularly rankled among advocates of science fiction, and frequently recurs when her writing is discussed.

Atwood has since said that she does at times write Social science fiction, and that Handmaid's Tale and Oryx and Crake can be designated as such. She clarified her meaning on the difference between speculative and science fiction, while admitting that others use the terms interchangeably: "For me, the science fiction label belongs on books with things in them that we can't yet do.... speculative fiction means a work that employs the means already to hand and that takes place on Planet Earth", and said that science fictional narratives give a writer the ability to explore themes in ways that realistic fiction cannot.

Contribution to the theorizing of Canadian identity
Atwood's contributions to the theorizing of Canadian identity have garnered attention both in Canada and internationally. Her principal work of literary criticism, Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature, is considered outdated in Canada but remains the standard introduction to Canadian literature in Canadian Studies programs internationally. In Survival, Atwood postulates that Canadian literature, and by extension Canadian identity, is characterized by the symbol of survival. This symbol is expressed in the omnipresent use of 'victim positions' in Canadian literature. These positions represent a scale of self-consciousness and self-actualization for the victim in the â'victor/victim' relationship. The "victor" in these scenarios may be other humans, nature, the wilderness or other external and internal factors which oppress the victim Atwood's Survival bears the influence of Northrop Frye's theory of garrison mentality; Atwood instrumentalizes Frye's concept to a critical tool. More recently, Atwood has continued her exploration of the implications of Canadian literary themes for Canadian identity in lectures such as Strange Things: The Malevolent North in Canadian Literature (1995).

Atwood'™s contribution to the theorizing of Canada is not limited to her non-fiction works. Several of her poetical and fiction works, including The Journals of Susanna Moodie, Alias Grace, The Blind Assassin and Surfacing, are examples of what postmodern literary theorist Linda Hutcheon calls 'Historiographic Metafiction'. In such works, Atwood explicitly explores the relation of history and narrative and the processes of creating history.

Ultimately, according to her theories in works such as Survival and her exploration of similar themes in her fiction, Atwood considers Canadian literature as the expression of Canadian identity. According to this literature, Canadian identity has been defined by a fear of nature, by settler history and by unquestioned adherence to the community.

Atwood and animals
Margaret Atwood has repeatedly made observations about our relationships to animals in her works. Atwood offers this observation about eating animals: "The animals die that we may live, they are substitute people...And we eat them, out of cans or otherwise; we are eaters of death, dead Christ-flesh resurrecting inside us, granting us life." Characters in her books link sexual oppression to meat-eating and consequently give up meat-eating. In The Edible Woman, Atwood's character Marian identifies with hunted animals and cries after hearing her fiance's experience of hunting and eviscerating a rabbit. Marian stops eating meat but then later returns to it.

In Cat's Eye, the narrator recognizes the similarity between a turkey and a baby. She looks at "the turkey, which resembles a trussed, headless baby. It has thrown off its disguise as a meal and has revealed itself to me for what it is, a large dead bird." In Atwood's Surfacing, a dead heron represents purposeless killing and prompts thoughts about other senseless deaths.

Recognition
Atwood has won more than 55 awards in Canada and internationally, including:

Awards

 * Governor General's Award, (1966, 1985)
 * Companion of the Order of Canada, 1981
 * Guggenheim fellowship, 1981
 * Los Angeles Times Fiction Award, 1986
 * Arthur C. Clarke Award for best Science Fiction, 1987
 * Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1988
 * Canadian Booksellers Association Author of the Year, 1989
 * Trillium Book Award, 1991, 1993, 1995
 * Government of France's Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, 1994
 * Booker Prize, 2000
 * Prince of Asturias Awards for Literature, 2008
 * Nelly Sachs Prize, Germany, 2010

Honorary degrees

 * Trent University, 1973
 * Queen's University, 1974
 * Concordia University, 1980
 * Smith College, 1982
 * University of Toronto, 1983
 * University of Waterloo, 1985
 * University of Guelph, 1985
 * Mount Holyoke College, 1985
 * Victoria College, 1987
 * UniversitÃ© de MontrÃ©al, 1991
 * University of Leeds, 1994
 * McMaster University, 1996
 * Laurentian University, 2001
 * Harvard University, 2004
 * Ontario College of Art & Design, 2009
 * Bard College, 2010

Novels

 * The Edible Woman (1969)
 * Surfacing (1972)
 * Lady Oracle (1976)
 * Life Before Man (1979, finalist for the Governor General's Award)
 * Bodily Harm (1981)
 * The Handmaid's Tale (1985, winner of the 1987 Arthur C. Clarke Award and 1985 Governor General's Award, finalist for the 1986 Booker Prize)
 * Cat's Eye (1988, finalist for the 1988 Governor General's Award and the 1989 Booker Prize)
 * The Robber Bride (1993, finalist for the 1994 Governor General's Award)
 * Alias Grace (1996, winner of the 1996 Giller Prize, finalist for the 1996 Booker Prize and the 1996 Governor General's Award)
 * The Blind Assassin (2000, winner of the 2000 Booker Prize and finalist for the 2000 Governor General's Award)
 * Oryx and Crake (2003, finalist for the 2003 Booker Prize and the 2003 Governor General's Award)
 * The Penelopiad (2005, longlisted for the 2007 IMPAC Award)
 * The Year of the Flood (September 2009, Oryx and Crake followup)

Short fiction collections

 * Dancing Girls (1977, winner of the St. Lawrence Award for Fiction and the award of The Periodical Distributors of Canada for Short Fiction)
 * Murder in the Dark (1983)
 * Bluebeard's Egg (1983)
 * Wilderness Tips (1991, finalist for the Governor General's Award)
 * Good Bones (1992)
 * Good Bones and Simple Murders (1994)
 * The Labrador Fiasco (1996)
 * The Tent (2006)
 * Moral Disorder (2006)

Poetry

 * Double Persephone (1961)
 * The Circle Game (1964, winner of the 1966 Governor General's Award)
 * Expeditions (1965)
 * Speeches for Doctor Frankenstein (1966)
 * The Animals in That Country (1968)
 * The Journals of Susanna Moodie (1970)
 * Procedures for Underground (1970)
 * Power Politics (1971)
 * You Are Happy (1974)
 * Selected Poems (1976)
 * Two-Headed Poems (1978)
 * True Stories (1981)
 * Love Songs of a Terminator (1983)
 * Snake Poems (1983)
 * Interlunar (1984)
 * Selected Poems 1966-1984 (Canada)
 * Selected Poems II: 1976-1986 (USA)
 * Morning in the Burned House, McClelland & Stewart (1995)
 * Eating Fire: Selected Poems, 1965-1995 (UK,1998)
 * "You Begin." (1978) -- as recited by Margaret Atwood; included in all three most recent editions of her "Selected Poems" as listed above (USA, CA, UK)
 * The Door (2007)

Children's books
 * Up in the Tree (1978)
 * Anna's Pet (1980) (with Joyce C. Barkhouse)
 * For the Birds (1990) (with Shelly Tanaka)
 * Princess Prunella and the Purple Peanut (1995)
 * Rude Ramsay and the Roaring Radishes (2003)
 * Bashful Bob and Doleful Dorinda (2006)

Non-fiction

 * Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature (1972)
 * Days of the Rebels 1815-1840 (1977)
 * Second Words: Selected Critical Prose (1982)
 * Through the One-Way Mirror (1986)
 * Strange Things: The Malevolent North in Canadian Literature (1995)
 * Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing (2002)
 * Moving Targets: Writing with Intent, 1982-2004 (2004)
 * Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose--1983-2005 (2005)
 * Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth (2008)

Edited
 * The New Oxford Book of Canadian Verse (1982)
 * The Canlit Foodbook (1987)
 * The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English (1988)
 * The Best American Short Stories 1989 (1989) (with Shannon Ravenel)
 * The New Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English (1995)

Drawings

 * Kanadian Kultchur Komix featuring "Survivalwoman" in This Magazine under the pseudonym, Bart Gerrard 1975-1980
 * Others appear on her website.

Television scripts

 * The Servant Girl (1974)
 * Snowbird (1981)
 * Heaven on Earth (1987)

Libretto

 * The Trumpets of Summer (1964) (with composer John Beckwith)
 * Frankenstein Monster Song (2004, with rock band One Ring Zero)

Audio/video

 * The Poetry and Voice of Margaret Atwood (1977)
 * Margaret Atwood Reads 'Unearthing Suite' (1985)
 * Margaret Atwood Reading From Her Poems (2005)