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Call Number: Mss 70, Pc 81, Tc 51 (A.86-24, A.86-25,
A.86-27, A.86-29, A.86-32, A.86-37, A.86-40, A.86-43, A.88-12, A.98-68,
A.06-52)
Title: John Newlove fonds.
Dates: 1954-2002.
Extent: 7.34 m of textual records and other material.
Biographical sketch: Born in Regina in 1938,
Newlove was raised in various small Saskatchewan towns, mainly Kamsack.
He attended the University of Saskatchewan for one year before embarking
on an extensive tour around Canada. Prior to this he had worked
briefly as a high school teacher in Birtle, Manitoba, as a social
worker in Yorkton, Saskatchewan, in radio in Weyburn and Regina,
and in various labouring jobs in British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
Between 1970 and 1980 he occupied the position of editor at McClelland
and Stewart in Toronto and writer-in-residence at various universities
including Loyola College Montreal and the University of Toronto.
Newlove also taught for a year at David Thompson University Centre,
B.C. in 1982. After 1986 he worked for the federal government in
Ottawa. He won the Governor General's award for poetry in 1972,
the Saskatchewan Writers' Guild Founders Award in 1984, and the
Literary Press Group Award in 1986. His poetry has been published
in journals, magazines and literary anthologies in Canada and the
United States and in several countries abroad. Newlove's poetry
was most popular in the 1960s and 1970s when he and Eli Mandel were
considered to be among the dominant voices of Canadian prairie poetry.
John Newlove died in Ottawa on December 23, 2003 at the age of 65.
Custodial history: The material in this fonds
was donated to Archives & Special
Collections by John Newlove in ten different accessions between
1986 and 1998. 2006 accession (A.06-52) was donated by his wife,
Susan Newlove.
Scope and content: The collection consists of
biographical material, manuscript material including correspondence,
literary manuscripts, edited revisions, books, journals, anthologies
and reviews. The correspondence includes substantial communications
between Newlove and other writers such as Earle Birney, Irving Layton,
Al Purdy, John Metcalf, Alden Nowlan, Barney Childs, Patrick Lane,
and others. Of his twelve publications, this collection contains
literary manuscripts of nine of them along with the related correspondence.
Typescripts of publications included are Grave Sirs (1962),
Moving in Alone (1965), The Cave (1968), Lies
(1972), and The Night the Dog Smiled (1986). 146 photographs,
4 drawings, 1 slide, 271 negatives, 11 audio cassettes and 1 videocassette
are also included in the fonds.
2006 accession consists of his correspondence, poetry, notebooks,
daily books, publications, and photographs.
Restrictions: Some folders have been restricted.
Contact the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections
for further information.
Finding aid: Printed finding aids are available
in the Archives & Special Collections reading room and on-line
finding aids are available at the links below:
Mss 70, Pc 81, Tc
51 (A.86-24, A.86-25, A.86-27, A.86-29, A.86-32, A.86-37, A.86-40,
A.86-43, A.88-12)
Mss 70, Pc
81 (A.98-68)
Mss
70 (A.06-52).
We greatly acknowledge the financial support of the Manitoba Department
of Culture, Heritage and Tourism and the Heritage Grants Advisory
Council in the creation of this finding aid.
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