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Titre propre
Carolyn Smart fonds
Dénomination générale des documents
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Fonds
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Mention d'échelle (cartographique)
Mention de projection (cartographique)
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Mention d'échelle (architecturale)
Juridiction responsable et dénomination (philatélique)
Zone des dates de production
Date(s)
-
1970-2008 (Production)
- Producteur
- Smart, Carolyn
Zone de description matérielle
Description matérielle
3 m of textual records, 28 audio cassettes, 3 videocassettes, 1 film reel
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Titres parallèles de la collection
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Note sur la collection
Zone de la description archivistique
Nom du producteur
Notice biographique
Carolyn Smart was born in England in 1952, and immigrated to Canada with her parents six years later. Smart grew up within the diplomatic community of Rockcliffe Park but at age 11 returned to England to attend boarding school on the coast of Sussex. Coming back to Canada, Smart lived in Toronto where she attended Bishop Strachan high school. It was there that she began writing poetry. Her first poem was published when she was 17 in an anthology called Vibrations, edited by Gage publishing and intended for study in schools. Smart attended the University of Toronto, where she majored in English Literature and Far Eastern Religion. Upon graduation in 1973, Smart worked as an editorial assistant for Doubleday Canada and then at Macmillan's as a poetry editor and publicist. Moving to Winnipeg for two years, she began work with the provincial government, editing the Manitoba Budget Address and organising interprovincial conferences for the office of the Premier. Back in Toronto she continued studying poetry with Joe Rosenblatt and Pier Giorgio di Cicco, and gave her first public reading in 1977. She worked at various part-time jobs including selling clothes at the Eaton Centre and freelance copy-editing. Her first Canada Council grant enabled her to begin writing full-time in 1979 and her first collection of poetry, Swimmers in Oblivion (York Publishing), was published in 1981. Other publications followed: Power Sources (Fiddlehead, 1984), Stoning the Moon (Oberon, 1989), The Way To Come Home (Brick Books, 1993), and At the End of the Day, a memoir (Penumbra Press, 2001). In 1992, Smart was shortlisted for a National Magazine Award for her poem The Sound of the Birds, published in Quarry magazine. In 1993, Smart won the CBC's Literary Contest in the Personal Essay Category for a portion of her memoir At the End of The Day. Smart's poems and essays have been published in over 150 magazines in Canada, the US, Britain, India and Australia. She continues to publish poetry and teaches both on-line for Writers In Electronic Residence and as director of Creative Writing at Queen's University. She has edited the anthology Lake Effect: An Anthology of Work by the Creative Writing Students at Queen's University, since 2003.
Historique de la conservation
Portée et contenu
The fonds consists of material relating to both the personal and professional life of Carolyn Smart and is comprised of the following series: Daybooks, Correspondence, Journals, Writing, Queen's University, Miscellaneous and Bronwen Wallace.
Zone des notes
État de conservation
Source immédiate d'acquisition
Material received from Ms. Carolyn Smart - 2008, 2021.
Classement
This material has been arranged by the archivist in accordance with what could be discerned of the creator's original order. A listing of the original material and how it was arranged is available at the repository. There were many publications within the original deposit of material, a small sample was kept. A listing of what was returned to the donor is available.
Langue des documents
- anglais
Écriture des documents
Localisation des originaux
5064.8
MI 160
SR1139
Disponibilité d'autres formats
Restrictions d'accès
Journals are closed for 75 years from date of deposit. Correspondence is closed for 25 years from date of deposit.