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- From: golchowy@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca (Gerald Olchowy)
- Subject: Quebec Nationalist Writer sells manuscripts to Ottawa!
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.134146.17824@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca>
- Sender: golchowy@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca (Gerald Olchowy)
- Organization: University of Toronto Chemistry Department
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 13:41:46 GMT
- Lines: 76
-
- From a Canadian Press report in the Globe and Mail, page D1, Nov. 17,
- 1992:
-
- National writer sells manuscripts to Ottawa: Quebec library 'told us
- to get lost'
-
- (Canadian Press)--Montreal--: Michel Tremblay, one of Quebec's
- best-known playwrights and a strong Quebec nationalist, has sold his
- manuscripts to the FEDERAL government for more than $300,000. But
- Tremblay said Sunday he has no regrets about selling papers to a
- federalist institution.
-
- "The property is very well managed in Ottawa, they have an extraordinary
- collection. And it's normal for writers to sell their manuscripts, if
- they are worth something."
-
- Tremblay said his agent offered the papers to Quebec's Bibliotheque
- nationale library in 1986 but was flatly, and rudely, refused.
-
- "They told us to get lost."
-
- Tremblay said he sold the documents, which span 30 years of his career,
- because he needed the money after his publisher went bankrupt.
-
- A second batch of papers was sold last year, and Tremblay says he has
- received more than $300,000 in all.
-
- Tremblay is best known for 'Les Belles Soeurs (The Sisters-in-Law)', a
- play first presented in 1968 and set in working-class east-end Montreal.
- The story concerns a woman who has won one million trading stamps and
- has invited her sisters and neighbors over to paste them into books.
-
- Meanwhile, the head of the Quebec writers' union called Quebec's refusal
- to buy Tremblay's manuscripts an insult to all writers in the province.
-
- Bruno Roy, president of L'Union des ecrivains et ecrivaines quebecois,
- said, "If they do this to Mr. Tremblay, imagine what happens to other
- writers. The message is that what we do is not important."
-
- Georges Cartier, the former head of Quebec's Bibliotheque nationale,
- said in an interview he wouldn't have accepted Tremblay's bid even if he
- could have afforded to.
-
- News of the sale of the manuscripts had people buzzing on the weekend at
- a book fair attended by Tremblay.
-
- Robert Savoie, an opera singer who lined up to have Tremblay sign a book
- for him, said he was there to support the playwright after reading about
- the sale of his papers.
-
- He said he was saddened that the manuscripts of "a Quebecker who has
- given us the joy of reading our language, our culture" are "lost
- forever". He blamed the Quebec government.
-
- At a nearby kiosk, Francois Jobin didn't see any moral or nationalist
- dilemma in the Tremblay affair.
-
- "I'd say [manuscripts] should go to the highest bidder," he said.
-
- ====================================================================
- End of article
- ====================================================================
-
- Note: The constitutional position of the Quebec government is that the
- federal government (which spends 40% of its cultural spending in Quebec
- though Quebec has only 25% of the population) should
- vacate the field of culture and allow the Quebec government should be
- allowed to be the sole protector of Quebecois culture...
-
- The irony is of course that Tremblay's papers would truly be "lost
- forever" if the Quebec government had its way...it wouldn't buy them,
- and if Canada accepted its constitutional demands, the federal
- government would have been unable to buy them also. The Quebec
- government...the great protector of Quebecois culture...NOT!
-
- Gerald
-