Gail Scott (born 1945) is a Canadian novelist, short story writer, essayist and translator,[1] best known for her work in experimental forms such as prose poetry[1] and New Narrative.[2] She was a major contributor to 1980s Québécoise feminist language theory, known as écriture au féminin,[3] which explores the relationship between language, bodies, and feminist politics.[4] Many of her novels and stories deal with fragmentation in time, in subjects, and in narrative structures.[5]
Biography
Born in Ottawa, Ontario in 1945,[6] Scott was raised in a bilingual community in rural Eastern Ontario[4] and educated in English and Modern Languages and French literature at Queen's University and the University of Grenoble, respectively,[6] before moving to Montreal, Quebec in 1967,[2] where she was involved in leftist and indépendantiste movements of the 1970s.[4] Initially working as a journalist, she was a founding editor of publications such as The Last Post, Des luttes et des rires des femmes, Spirale and Tessera.[2] Beginning in 1980, she taught journalism at Concordia University until 1991, and published novels and essay collections.[6] Many of Scott's works explore her experience as an anglophone involved in Québécoise political and literary movements.[4] Scott, along with other Québecoise feminist literary theorists like Nicole Brossard and France Théoret, published La théorie, un dimanche, a collection of essays and creative work that explores the gendered writing subject in language.[4] Her prose work draws heavily on poetic forms and structures, and was anthologized in Prismatic Publics: Innovative Canadian Women's Poetry and Poetics (2009).[1] In an interview published on Lemon Hound, Scott said: "I like to think of each sentence—as much as possible—as a performative unit. A call. The space between the sentences is where the audience or reader bridges with her energy, and in her way, the gap. My debt to poetry has to do with resisting the passive reader."[5] Her works have been noted for their experimental sentence structures and their emphasis on syntax.[5]
^Carrière, Marie J. (2002). Writing in the feminine in French and English Canada : a question of ethics. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN9781442683716. OCLC666912356.