| Title: |
Poésie francophone: Poètes du Québec
|
|
| URL: |
http://server.fhp.uoregon.edu/dtu/sites/francophone/ |
| Authors:
|
Karen
McPherson, Assistant Professor, Romance Languages |
| Description:
|
Poetry has always
occupied a prominent position within Québecs long and
rich literary tradition. The poetry of Québec spans four centuriesfrom
the oral tradition of songs and verse in La Nouvelle-France and Acadie
to the vibrant contemporary scene. We offer you here an introduction
to six remarkable twentieth-century Québécois poets.
Contemporary poets René Lapierre, Louise Dupré, and
Anne-Marie Alonzo read from their own work and then from the work
of poets whom they admire. The three poets chosen by them to represent
this earlier generation of writers are Jacob Isaac Ségal (an
important Yiddish poet whose work has recently been reissued with
accompanying French translations), Anne Hébert and Saint-Denys
Garneau. Hébert and Garneau are, with Emile Nelligan, Québecs
most celebrated poets. |
| Design: |
Daniel D. Gilfillan, Ph.D.
|
| FHP Director: |
Judith Musick, Ph.D. |
| FHP Research Associates:
|
Jan Emerson, Ph.D.
Daniel Gilfillan, Ph.D. |
| Faculty Advisors &
Contributors: |
Barbara Altmann, Ph.D.
Louise Bishop, Ph.D.
Regina Psaki, Ph.D.
Stephanie Wood, Ph.D. |
| Funding Sources: |
Center
for the Study of Women in Society |
| Copyright Statement:
|
©2002, Feminist Humanities
Project, Center for the Study of Women in Society, University of Oregon.
All rights reserved.Documents and materials located on the Feminist
Humanities Project, University of Oregon WWW and FTP servers are copyrighted
by the Feminist Humanities Project, University of Oregon, or by the
authors of the individual documents, and are provided for the convenience
of university faculty, students, and staff, with no warranty of accuracy
or usability. Where material mirrors corresponding hardcopy documents,
and/or where material makes explicit statements of university policy,
the hardcopy version should be considered authoritative. The University
of Oregon is an equal opportunity, affirmative action institution
committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans
with Disabilities Act.Viewing software capable of displaying these
materials in large print are available for a variety of computing
systems. In addition, all publications on this server will be made
available in alternative accessible formats on request; telephone
(541) 346-5775 for assistance. |
| Username & Password
Access: |
Due to the many factors involved
with copyright and the electronic medium, each of the web sites in
our Digital Teaching Unit collection is password-protected. If you
would like to utilize or view any of the sites for educational use,
please contact Stephanie Wood
and please include in your e-mail the name of the site you would like
to access, your school affiliation, and the subject area you teach.
Thank you for your interest. |