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Joy Kogawa |
Musings from a Writer's Life
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Topic Background |
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The Canadian Book Review Annual cites Joy Kogawa’s accomplishment in her award-winning first novel, Obasan, is that she “put human flesh on the familiar bones of one of the sorriest skeletons in Canada’s closet”. Obasan , published in 1981, is a memoir of Kogawa’s family's forced relocation from the West Coast during World War II when she was six years old. The Japanese-Canadian family was herded into converted barns on the Pacific National Exhibition grounds in Vancouver, then sent by train to internment camps, first in the Slocan Valley in the British Columbia Interior, then in Coaldale, Alberta, where Joy graduated from high school. |
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Speaker Biography |
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| Joy Kogawa was born in Vancouver, but currently lives primarily in Toronto while maintaining an apartment in Vancouver, to accommodate visits to her father. She has two children and has become a grandmother. In 1986. Kogawa was made a member of the Order of Canada, and in 2006, a member of the Order of British Columbia. She received an honorary doctorate from Simon Fraser University in 1993. The Save Kogawa House committee initiated a campaign to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home in the Marpole neighbourhood of Vancouver from demolition. They developed national support from writers and writing organizations across Canada demonstrating that the house was regarded by many as having historical value and literary significance. The Save Kogawa House committee made a successful presentation to the City of Vancouver councilors to create an unprecendented 120 day delay of the processing of a demolition permit for the house in November, 2005, two days after the City of Vancouver had pronouced Obasan Cherry Tree Day [1] and planted a graft of the cherry tree at Vancouver City Hall from the original cherry tree at Kogawa House. The Land Conservancy of British Columbia became involved in the saving of Kogawa House in late 2005 and, working with the Save Kogawa House Committee, took over the fund-raising efforts and media attention. The Land Conservancy became the owners of the house on May, 2006, and continue to raise funds to renovate the house and establish a writers-in-residence program. For more information about Joy Kogawa visit www.kogawahouse.com |
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