Misplaced Pages

Nancy Huston

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Canadian author, based in France (born 1953)
Nancy Huston
OC
Huston in 2008Huston in 2008
BornNancy Louise Huston
(1953-09-16) 16 September 1953 (age 71)
Calgary, Alberta
OccupationNovelist, translator
NationalityCanadian
Notable awardsGrand prix des lectrices de Elle
SpouseTzvetan Todorov
(m. ??; div. 2014)
PartnerGuy Oberson (20??–present)
Children2, including Léa

Nancy Louise Huston, OC (born September 16, 1953) is a Canadian novelist and essayist, a longtime resident of France, who writes primarily in French and translates her own works into English.

Biography

Huston was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, the city in which she lived until age fifteen, at which time her family moved to Wilton, New Hampshire, where she attended High Mowing School. She studied at Sarah Lawrence College in New York City, where she was given the opportunity to spend a year of her studies in Paris. Arriving in Paris in 1973, Huston obtained a master's degree from the École des hautes études en sciences sociales, writing a thesis on swear words under the supervision of Roland Barthes.

She was the second wife of Bulgarian-French historian and philosopher Tzvetan Todorov, with whom she had two children, daughter Léa and son Sacha; she and Todorov divorced in 2014. Huston now shares her life with Swiss painter Guy Oberson.

Career

Because French was a language acquired at school and university, Huston found that the combination of her eventual command of the language and her distance from it as a non-native speaker helped her to find her literary voice. Since 1980, Huston has published over 45 books of fiction and non-fiction, including theatre and children's books. Some of her publications are self-translations of previously published works. Essentially she writes in French and subsequently self-translates into English but Plainsong (1993) was written first in English and then self-translated to French as Cantique des plaines (1993) – it was, however, the French version which first found a publisher.

She has 25 fiction publications, of which 13 are original fiction and 11 are self-translations.

In her fiction, only Trois fois septembre (1989), Visages de l'aube (2001) and Infrarouge (2010), as well as her three children's books, have not been published in English. She has also published two plays but has not yet translated either.

She has 14 non-fiction publications, of which 12 are original publications and two are self-translations. The other ten non-fiction publications have not yet been self-translated.

While Huston's often controversial works of non-fiction have been well-received, her fiction has earned her the most critical acclaim. Her first novel, Les variations Goldberg (1981), was awarded the Prix Contrepoint and was shortlisted for the Prix Femina. She translated this novel into English as The Goldberg Variations (1996).

Her next major award came in 1993 when she was received the Canadian Governor General's Award for Fiction in French for Cantique des Plaines (1993). This was initially contested as it was a translation of Plainsong (1993), but Huston demonstrated that it was an adaptation and kept the prize. A subsequent novel, La virevolte (1994), won the Prix "L" and the Prix Louis-Hémon. It was published in English in 1996 as Slow Emergencies.

Huston's novel, Instruments des ténèbres, has been her most successful novel yet, being shortlisted for the Prix Femina, and the Governor General's Award. It was awarded the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens, as well as both the Prix des lectrices (Elle Québec) and the Prix du livre Inter in 1997.

In 1998, she was nominated for a Governor General's Award for her novel L'Empreinte de l'ange. The next year she was nominated for a Governor General's Award for translating the work into English as The Mark of the Angel.

In 1999, she appeared in the film Set Me Free (Emporte-moi), also collaborating on the screenplay.

Her works have been translated into many languages from Chinese to Russian.

In 2005, she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada,

In 2006, she received the Prix Femina for the novel Lignes de faille and which, as Fault Lines, has been published by Atlantic Books and was shortlisted for the 2008 Orange Prize.

In 2007, she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Liège.

In 2010, she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Ottawa.

In 2012, she was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal. That same year, she won the Literary Review's Bad Sex in Fiction Award for her novel, Infrared.

Critical response

This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Canadian poet and critic Frank Davey in "Big, Bad and Little Known: The Anglophone-Canadian Nancy Huston" (2004), is critical of Huston's English writing style. In response to this, Joseph Pivato in "Nancy Huston Meets le Nouveau Roman" (2016), contends that Huston was influenced by the French writers of le Nouveau Roman and their theory of composition.

Selected works

Fiction

  • The Goldberg Variations (1996) – self-translation of Les variations Goldberg [fr] (1981) awarded the Prix Contrepoint in 1982.
  • The Story of Omaya (1987) – self-translation of Histoire d'Omaya (1985)
  • Trois fois septembre (1989)
  • Plainsong (1993) – Cantique des plaines (self-translation) (1993)
  • Slow Emergencies (1996) – self-translation of La Virevolte (1994)
  • Instruments of Darkness (1997) – self-translation of Instruments des ténèbres (1996)
  • The Mark of the Angel (1998) – self-translation of L'empreinte de l'ange (1988)
  • Prodigy: A Novella (2000) – self-translation of Prodige : polyphonie (1999)
  • Limbes/Limbo (2000)
  • Visages de l'aube (2001)
  • Dolce Agonia (2001) – self-translation of the French version Dolce agonia (2001), cover illustration by Ralph Petty
  • An Adoration (2003) – self-translation of Une adoration (2003)
  • Fault Lines (2007) – self-translation of Lignes de faille (2006)
  • Infrarouge (2010) – Infrared (2012)
  • Danse noire* (2013) –

Theatre

  • Angela et Marina (2002)
  • Jocaste reine (2009, translated as Jocasta Regina, 2010)

Non-fiction

  • Jouer au papa et à l'amant (1979)
  • Dire et interdire : éléments de jurologie (1980)
  • Mosaïque de la pornographie : Marie-Thérèse et les autres (1982)
  • Journal de la création (1990)
  • Tombeau de Romain Gary (1995)
  • Pour un patriotisme de l'ambiguïté (1995)
  • Nord perdu : suivi de Douze France (1999)
  • Losing north: musings on land, tongue and self (2002)
  • Professeurs de désespoir (2004)
  • Passions d'Annie Leclerc (2007)
  • L'espèce fabulatrice (2008)
  • The Tale-Tellers: A Short Study of Humankind (2008)

Correspondence

  • À l'amour comme à la guerre (1984)
  • Lettres parisiennes : autopsie de l'exil (1986)

Selected texts

  • Désirs et réalités : textes choisis 1978–1994 (1995)
  • Âmes et corps : textes choisis 1981–2003 (2004)

Children's fiction

Filmography

Notes

  1. "Nancy Huston – Penguin Random House". Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  2. Nancy Huston entry at Encyclopædia Britannica
  3. Chardon, Elisabeth (2008-02-21). "Nancy Huston et Sacha Todorov sans masques". Le Temps (in French). Retrieved 2024-03-08.
  4. "Le philosophe et historien Tzvetan Todorov est mort" [Philosopher and Historian Tzvetan Todorov is Dead]. L'Express (in French). 2017-02-07. Archived from the original on 2017-02-07. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
  5. Author Profile: Nancy Huston
  6. "Leméac Éditeur - Nancy Huston". Leméac Éditeur.
  7. "Mrs. Nancy Huston | Paris, France | Officer of the Order of Canada". Governor General of Canada. 2005-06-29. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
  8. "Heather O'Neill, Nancy Huston in running for U.K.'s Orange Prize". CBC News. March 18, 2008.
  9. Outstanding individuals to receive honorary doctorates at University of Ottawa spring convocation Archived 2010-11-15 at the Wayback Machine, University of Ottawa Website, 3 June 2010
  10. "Nancy Huston | Paris, France | Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee Medal". Governor General of Canada. 2012. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
  11. Kennedy, Maev (December 4, 2012). "Bad sex award goes to Nancy Huston's 'babies and bedazzlements'". The Guardian. Retrieved December 4, 2012.

References

  • Eugene Benson and William Toye, eds. The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature, Second Edition. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1997: 564–565. ISBN 0-19-541167-6

External links

Laureates of the Prix Femina
1904–1925
1926–1950
1951–1975
1976–2000
2001–present
Categories: