George J. Dance



George James Dance is a Canadian poet, prose writer, and blogger on poetry and politics.

Youth
Dance was born in Kingston, Ontario, the son of Hilda (Leith) and George Nelson Dance, a sergeant-major in the Canadian Army. His mother died when he was too young to remember her.

Dance and his family lived in Quebec, Manitoba, and Ontario again in his childhood. He also spent several summers with an uncle and aunt in New Hampshire. He began writing in public school, and became interested in poetry in his first year of high school, 1967, when he was introduced to the poems of Leonard Cohen, that year's winner of the Governor General's Award for English language poetry or drama.

Dance's family moved to Newcastle (now Miramichi), New Brunswick, when he was 16, and he took his last year of high school at that city's Harkins Academy, where he studied poetry under Doug Underhill.

After graduating from Harkins with honors, Dance attended Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick. In his second year he studied Modern English poetry (a third-year course) under John Thompson. That experience motivated him to begin writing his own poetry, none of which the student newspaper, the Argosy, would print. (The Argosy did, however, publish a short story of his, "The Little Gentleman".)

Dance dropped out of university after his second year due to financial difficulties and, unable to find a job, moved in 1973 to Toronto, where he worked at a variety of menial jobs. The following summer he read Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged, which was the beginning of what he has called "a 30-year career detour into politics.."

Libertarian activist
Dance has been a member of the Libertarian Party of Canada and the Ontario Libertarian Party since the mid-1970s, and has served as interim leader of both parties.

Dance listed his occupation as stock clerk, layout artist, freelance typesetter and office manager on various occasions between 1979 and 1993. For more than ten years (1987-1998) he edited and published Libertarian Bulletin, the Ontario Libertarian Party's newsletter.

Dance has called for increased privatization. He is an opponent of anarchism, and describes himself as a "proper-government libertarian" (i.e., supporting a government that recognizes and respects individual liberties). Dance is also an opponent of restrictions on public smoking.

Dance ran for Leader of the Libertarian Party of Canada in 1990, coming in second to Stanislaw Tyminski. He succeeded to the leadership when Tyminski left Canada in 1991 to run for President of Poland. Dance held the position until May 1993, when Hilliard Cox was chosen to replace him. As Leader, he led the Libertarian Party's opposition to the Charlottetown Accord constitutional amendments. In 1992, Dance indicated that his party might seek an electoral alliance with the Freedom Party of Ontario. The Freedom Party rejected this suggestion.

Dance also served as interim leader of the Libertarian Party of Canada from 1995 to 1996.

Dance served on the executive of the Ontario Libertarian Party from 1985 until 2008, for the last 12 of those years as party chairman. He became the party's leader following the resignation of John Shadbolt on June 9, 1995. As party leader, he contested a 1996 by-election in York South. He held the position until Sam Apelbaum was selected at a delegated convention in late 1996. Dance was elected chairman at the same 1996 convention. He retired from the office in 2008.

In January 2009, the Western Standard ranked Dance at #62 in its "Liberty 100" list of "Canadians who have advanced economic and personal liberty" in 2008.

Columnist, blogger, and poet
Dance began posting onto usenet in 2000, mostly on politics and philosophy groups. In 2007 he joined several usenet poetry groups, and began writing poetry again.

In early 2008, Dance began writing an occasional political column, "The Ron Paul Reports" (now "The Continuing rEVOLution") on the online magazine Nolan Chart.

In 2009, six of Dance's poems were published in the online literary magazine, The Other Voices International Project.

Also in 2009, he wrote the long poem "Betty, or Betty's Hat", and began The Betty Blog as a place to archive it. (Due to a complaint of copyright infringement from someone who claimed to have written a poem called "Batty," the names were changed to "Penny, or Penny's Hat" and "The Penny Blog" the following year).

In 2010 he began a daily political blog, "The Political Animal" (now "GD's Political Animal").

In 2011 he translated, blogged, and self-published Looking and Playing in Space, an English translation of Regards et jeux dans l'espace by French-Canadian poet Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau. That year he also published his first full-length non-fiction book, Ron Paul and his rEVOLution, a collection of some of his Nolan Chart columns.

In July 2011 he began the poetry wiki Penny's Poetry Pages. The wiki had over 5,000 articles (including poems) by the end of 2012, and over 8,000 by the end of 2013.

He self-published Penny, or Penny's Hat in 2013.

In 2015 he published 3 poems in The Horror Zine, and released his first collection, Doggerel, and other doggerel.

Poetry

 * Penny, or Penny's Hat (long poem). Toronto: Principled Press / Baltimore, MD: Lulu Press, 2013.
 * Doggerel, and other doggerel. Toronto: Principled Press / Baltimore, MD: Lulu Press, 2015.

Non-fiction

 * Toward the Rule of What? (pamphlet). Toronto: privately published, 1984.
 * Ron Paul and his rEVOLution. Toronto: Principled Press / Baltimore, MD: Lulu Press, 2011.

Translated

 * Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau, Looking and Playing in Space (Regards et jeux dans l'espace). Toronto: Principled Press / Baltimore, MD: Lulu Press, 2011.

Poems by George J. Dance

 * 1) April
 * 2) August
 * 3) Autumn Music
 * 4) December
 * 5) Fuji-san
 * 6) In the Garden
 * 7) March
 * 8) May
 * 9) July

Translations

 * 1) Spring Scene / Du Fu
 * 2) Lorelei's Song / Heinrich Heine
 * 3) Romance Novel / Arthur Rimbaud
 * 4) Sensation / Arthur Rimbaud
 * 5) Vowels (Voyelles) / Arthur Rimbaud

Articles by George J. Dance

 * Articles