Lessons from Venice
- Publisher
- Ekstasis Editions
- Initial publish date
- Jun 2020
- Category
- Canadian
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781771713702
- Publish Date
- Jun 2020
- List Price
- $23.95
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Where to buy it
Description
When Denise Desautels traveled to Italy in 1988 to write about Michel Goulet’s art installations at the 43rd Venice Art Biennale, she brought with her the autobiographical themes to which she frequently returns in her writing: memory, childhood, mourning. As she circled Goulet’s sculptures and moved through the City of Masks, Desautels sought to look beyond their facades, exploring relationships between language, silence, place, and the self, much like Ingeborg Bachmann in Frankfort Lectures on Poetics (known as lessons in French). No one could have known, however, that a mass shooting at the École Polytechnique would soon send shockwaves through Montreal. Having begun as a reflection on art and objecthood, proximity and distance, truth and illusion, Lessons from Venice then turned into a moving tribute to the fourteen women killed by a misogynist gunman in the Montreal Massacre on December 6, 1989. Almost thirty years later, this work has gained even more urgency since its original publication. In an era when gun violence, hate crimes, and limitations on women’s rights threaten to appear banal in North America, Desautels’ poetry offers an act of resistance, a search for meaning, and a powerful expression of solidarity with all those who seek to come to grips with the past in the present.
About the authors
Denise Desautels was born in Montreal. She won the Prix de la Fondation Les Forges for Leçons de Venice(1990), the Governor General's Award and the Prix de la revue Estuaire for Le saut de l'ange (1992), the Prix de la Société des écrivains canadiens and the Prix de la Société Radio-Canada for Tombeau de Lou(2000). In 1999 she received La Médaille Échelon vermeil, the highest honour given by the city of Paris.
Denise Desautels' profile page
Alisa Belanger is an Assistant Professor of French at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. She holds a doctorate in French and Francophone Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles. In addition to translations of fiction and academic texts, she has published articles on Quebec poetry in the U.S. and Canada.