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Hugh MacLennan

John Hugh MacLennan CC CQ FRSL FRSC (March 20, 1907 – November 9, 1990) was a Canadian writer and professor of English at McGill University. He won five Governor General's Awards and a Royal Bank Award.

Hugh MacLennan
MacLennan in 1943
Born
John Hugh MacLennan

(1907-03-20)March 20, 1907
DiedNovember 9, 1990(1990-11-09) (aged 83)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Spouses
  • (m. 1936; died 1957)
  • Aline Walker
    (m. 1959)
Writing career
Notable works
Notable awardsGovernor General's Literary Award (1945; 1948; 1949; 1954; 1959)
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisOxyrhynchus: An Economic and Social Study (1935)
Academic work
DisciplineLiterature
InstitutionsMcGill University
Notable studentsMarian Engel

Family and childhood edit

MacLennan was born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, on March 20, 1907.[1] His parents were Samuel MacLennan, a colliery physician, and Katherine MacQuarrie; Hugh also had an older sister named Frances.[1] Samuel was a stern Calvinist, while Katherine was creative, warm and dreamy, and both parents would be large influences on Hugh's character.[2] In 1913, the family spent several months in London while Samuel took on further study to become a medical specialist.[3] On returning to Canada, they briefly lived in Sydney, Nova Scotia, before settling in Halifax.[3] In December 1917, young Hugh experienced the Halifax Explosion, which he would later write about in his first published novel, Barometer Rising.[4] From the ages of twelve to twenty-one, he slept in a tent in the family's backyard, even in the cold winter, possibly as an escape from his strict father.[5] Hugh grew up believing in the importance of religion; he and Frances regularly went to Sunday school, and the family attended Presbyterian church services twice each Sunday.[6] He was also active in sports, and became especially good at tennis, eventually winning the Nova Scotia men's double championship in 1927.[7]

Education edit

MacLennan and his sister were pushed extremely hard by their father to spend long hours learning the classics.[8] While this was very difficult for Frances, who had no interest in Greek, Hugh grew to enjoy this field of study.[8] Their father had an ambitious educational path planned for Hugh: studying the classics at Dalhousie University, getting a Rhodes Scholarship, and then continuing his studies in England.[9]

While at Dalhousie, he realized that his inner wish was to pursue an artistic career, the influence of his creative mother.[9] At Oxford, he struggled with balancing his passion for Greek and Latin studies with these artistic instincts.[10] In his first year at the university's Oriel College,[11] MacLennan worked incredibly hard at his classics courses, but was only able to achieve second-class honours.[12] By his second year, he had resigned himself to such results, and while still working diligently, decided not to overwork himself as before.[13] In his fourth year, he was finding it increasingly difficult to concentrate on his studies and spent more and more time at tennis and writing poetry.[14] In letters to his family from around this time are hints that he hoped to be a successful writer.[15] In late 1931, MacLennan sent some of his poetry to three publishers, including the firms of John Lane and Elkin Mathews, but it was turned down.[16]

MacLennan's four years in Oxford gave him the opportunity to travel throughout Europe, and he visited countries such as Switzerland, France, Greece, and Italy.[17] He spent some of his holidays lodging with a family in Germany, through which he acquired a very good proficiency in German.[18] His travels and his exposure to different political ideas caused MacLennan to begin to question his father's puritanical, conservative attitudes that he had until then taken for granted.[19]

MacLennan won a $400 scholarship to continue his studies at Princeton University, and despite his growing disinclination to keep studying the classics, he decided to go there.[20] This was partly to appease his father, and partly because the Great Depression meant that there were few jobs available.[21] In June 1932, while sailing home from England, he met his future wife, American Dorothy Duncan.[22] Falling in love with her made him change his mind about Princeton.[23] For one thing, his father insisted he should not get married before becoming financially independent, which would mean delaying marriage at least until his graduation. In addition, MacLennan was already unhappy about having to accept money from his father for the part of his Princeton studies that would not be covered by his scholarship.[23] However, his applications were rejected from both of the Canadian universities he applied to that had classics department positions opening; thus, he grudgingly agreed to go to Princeton after all.[24]

His three years at Princeton were unhappy. The style of classical study there was very different from what he was used to at Oxford, with Princeton's scholarship "consist[ing] of extremely detailed analyses of classical texts and sources—thorough, but unoriginal."[25] He began to rebel against his father's ideals: he stopped going to church and put increasing energy into his writing at the expense of his studies; furthermore, in addition to resenting his financial dependence on his father, he continued his relationship with Dorothy even though he knew his father would not approve of her American, Lowland Scottish, Christian Science, business-world background.[26]

Unpublished novels edit

At Princeton, MacLennan wrote his first novel, So All Their Praises. He found one publisher who was willing to take the manuscript, as long as he made certain changes; however, this company went out of business before the book could be published.[27] In spring 1935, he finished his PhD thesis, Oxyrhynchus: An Economic and Social Study, about the decline of a Roman colony in Egypt,[28] which was published by Princeton University Press and reprinted in 1968 by A.M. Hakkert.[29]

In 1935, there were very few teaching jobs available as a result of the Depression,[30] and MacLennan's field of study, the classics, was in particular becoming less significant in North American education.[20] He took a position at Lower Canada College in Montreal, Quebec, even though he felt it was beneath him, as just his Dalhousie BA would have been a sufficient qualification for the job.[30] He generally did not enjoy working there, and resented the long hours required of him for low pay, but was nonetheless a stimulating teacher, at least for the brighter students.[31] MacLennan would later poke fun at Lower Canada College in his depiction of Waterloo School in The Watch That Ends the Night.[32] On June 22, 1936, he and Dorothy were wed near her home in Wilmette, Illinois, and settled in Montreal.[33]

Meanwhile, in 1934–1938, MacLennan was working on his second novel, A Man Should Rejoice.[34] Longman, Green and Company and Duell, Sloan and Pearce both showed strong interest in the novel, but in the end neither published it.[35]

In February 1939, MacLennan's father died after suffering from high blood pressure. It was a huge surprise to MacLennan, as in the previous year they had just begun to become closer and to reconcile their opposing views.[36] For several months after his father's death MacLennan continued to write letters to him, in which he discussed his thoughts on the possibility and implications of a war in Europe.[37]

Barometer Rising edit

Dorothy convinced MacLennan that the failure of his first two novels was due to his having set one in Europe and the other in the United States; she persuaded him to write about Canada, the country he knew best.[38] She told him that "Nobody's going to understand Canada until she evolves a literature of her own, and you're the fellow to start bringing Canadian novels up to date."[38] Until then there had been a sporadic tradition of Anglo-Canadian literature, with such writers as Thomas Chandler Haliburton (1796–1865), Susanna Moodie (1803-1885), L. M. Montgomery (1874-1942), Stephen Leacock (1869-1944), Morley Callaghan (1903 – 1990), and W.O. Mitchell (1914-1998). MacLennan set out to define Canada for Canadians through a national novel.[39]

Barometer Rising, his novel about the social class structure of Nova Scotia and the Halifax Explosion of 1917, was published in 1941.

Later novels edit

His most famous novel, Two Solitudes, a literary allegory for the tensions between English and French Canada, followed in 1945. That year, he left Lower Canada College. Two Solitudes won MacLennan his first Governor General's Award for Fiction. In 1948, MacLennan published The Precipice, which again won the Governor General's Award. The following year, he published a collection of essays, Cross Country, which won the Governor General's Award for Non-Fiction.

In 1951, MacLennan returned to teaching, accepting a position at McGill University.[40] In 1952, he was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and awarded the society's Lorne Pierce Medal.[11] In 1954, he published another essay collection, Thirty and Three, which again won the Governor General's Award for Non-Fiction.[citation needed] In 1956, he was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.[11]

One of MacLennan's students at McGill was Marian Engel,[41] who became a noted Canadian novelist in the 1970s. He served as her master's supervisor in c. 1958.[41] Another notable student was Leonard Cohen, the popular songwriter, poet and novelist.

Dorothy Duncan died in 1957.[42] MacLennan married his second wife, Aline Walker, in 1959. That same year, he published The Watch That Ends the Night, which won his final Governor General's Award.

In 1967 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.[11][43] In 1985 he was made a Knight of the National Order of Quebec.

MacLennan continued to write and publish work, with his final novel Voices in Time appearing in 1980.[44] He died on November 9, 1990, in Montreal, Quebec.[44]

The Canadian band The Tragically Hip, on their album Fully Completely, have a song called "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)". A passage from The Watch That Ends the Night is adapted for use in the song.

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

  • Man Should Rejoice, a critical edition by Hugh MacLennan; edited and with an introduction by Colin Hill, Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, April 2019, ISBN 978-0-7766-2799-1
  • Barometer Rising (1941)
  • Two Solitudes (1945)
  • The Precipice (1948)
  • Each Man's Son (1951)
  • The Watch That Ends the Night (1957)
  • Return of the Sphinx (1967)
  • Voices in Time (1980)

Non-fiction edit

  • Oxyrhyncus : An Economic and Social Study (1935)
  • Canadian Unity and Quebec (1942)
  • Cross Country (1949)
  • The Future of the Novel as an Art Form (1959)
  • Scotchman's Return and Other Essays (1960)
  • Seven Rivers of Canada (1961). US title The Rivers of Canada: The Mackenzie, the St. Lawrence, the Ottawa, the Red, the Saskatchewan, the Fraser, the St. John (1962).
  • The Colour of Canada (1967)
  • The Other Side of Hugh MacLennan (1978)
  • On Being a Maritime Writer (1984)
  • Dear Marian, Dear Hugh:The MacLennan–Engel Correspondence (1995; ed. Christl Verduyn)

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Cameron 1981, pp. 4–5; Hoy 1990, p. 1.
  2. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 5–6.
  3. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 8.
  4. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 13; Hoy 1990, p. 1.
  5. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 15; Hoy 1990, p. 1.
  6. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 12.
  7. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 17, 21.
  8. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 15.
  9. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 20.
  10. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 23, 58.
  11. ^ a b c d MacLulich 1983, "Chronology".
  12. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 26–27, 33.
  13. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 48.
  14. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 56.
  15. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 57–58.
  16. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 58.
  17. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 31–32, 34–36, 39–40, 55–56; Hoy 1990, p. 1.
  18. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 46, 53–54, 60.
  19. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 43, 58–59.
  20. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 62.
  21. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 61–62.
  22. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 66.
  23. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 71.
  24. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 72–73.
  25. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 73.
  26. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 77.
  27. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 87.
  28. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 91; Hoy 1990, p. 1.
  29. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 91.
  30. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 101.
  31. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 105–106.
  32. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 104.
  33. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 112.
  34. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 107–112, 119.
  35. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 119–120.
  36. ^ Cameron 1981, p. 121.
  37. ^ Cameron 1981, pp. 121–124.
  38. ^ a b Cameron 1981, p. 133.
  39. ^ Peepre-Bordessa 1990, p. 52.
  40. ^ Gibson, Douglas. . Historica Canada. Archived from the original on 28 February 2014.
  41. ^ a b Verduyn 1995, p. 1.
  42. ^ MacLulich 1983, p. 78.
  43. ^ "Order of Canada - Hugh MacLennan, C.C., C.Q., Ph.D." Governor General of Canada Archives. from the original on 2020-10-24. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  44. ^ a b Cameron 2015.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • Bourgoin, Suzanne M.; Byers, Paula K., eds. (2004). "Hugh MacLennan". Encyclopedia of World Biography. Vol. 10 (2nd ed.). Detroit, Michigan: Gale. pp. 110–111. from the original on January 27, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
  • Cockburn, Robert H. (1969). The Novels of Hugh MacLennan. Montreal: Harvest House. ISBN 978-0-88772-108-3.
  • Goetsch, Paul, ed. (1973). Hugh MacLennan. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 978-0-07-077365-3.
  • Lucas, Alec (1970). Hugh MacLennan. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. OCLC 1035597997. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
  • Morley, Patricia A. (1972). The Immoral Moralists: Hugh Maclennan and Leonard Cohen. Toronto: Clarke, Irwin & Company. ISBN 978-0-7720-0555-7. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
  • Tierney, Frank M., ed. (1994). Hugh MacLennan. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press. ISBN 978-0-7766-0389-6.
  • Woodcock, George (1969). Hugh MacLennan. Toronto: Copp Clark Publishing Company. OCLC 612571738.

External links edit

  • MacLennan project at McGill University
Awards
Preceded by Governor General's Award
for English-language fiction

1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor General's Award
for English-language fiction

1948
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor General's Award for
English-language non-fiction

1949
With: Robert MacGregor Dawson
Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by Lorne Pierce Medal
1952
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor General's Award for
English-language non-fiction

1954
With: Arthur R. M. Lower
Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor General's Award
for English-language fiction

1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by Molson Prize
1967
With: Georges-Henri Lévesque
Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Succeeded by
No award
Last awarded to
Marian Engel
Canadian Authors Association
Award for Fiction

1981
Succeeded by

hugh, maclennan, scottish, broadcaster, author, hugh, maclennan, canadian, businessman, hugh, mclennan, john, frsl, frsc, march, 1907, november, 1990, canadian, writer, professor, english, mcgill, university, five, governor, general, awards, royal, bank, award. For the Scottish broadcaster and author see Hugh Dan MacLennan For the Canadian businessman see Hugh McLennan John Hugh MacLennan CC CQ FRSL FRSC March 20 1907 November 9 1990 was a Canadian writer and professor of English at McGill University He won five Governor General s Awards and a Royal Bank Award Hugh MacLennanCC CQ FRSL FRSCMacLennan in 1943BornJohn Hugh MacLennan 1907 03 20 March 20 1907Glace Bay Nova Scotia CanadaDiedNovember 9 1990 1990 11 09 aged 83 Montreal Quebec CanadaSpousesDorothy Duncan m 1936 died 1957 wbr Aline Walker m 1959 wbr Writing careerNotable worksBarometer Rising 1941 Two Solitudes 1945 The Watch That Ends the Night 1958 Notable awardsGovernor General s Literary Award 1945 1948 1949 1954 1959 Academic backgroundAlma materDalhousie UniversityOriel College OxfordPrinceton UniversityThesisOxyrhynchus An Economic and Social Study 1935 Academic workDisciplineLiteratureInstitutionsMcGill UniversityNotable studentsMarian Engel Contents 1 Family and childhood 2 Education 3 Unpublished novels 4 Barometer Rising 5 Later novels 6 Bibliography 6 1 Novels 6 2 Non fiction 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksFamily and childhood editMacLennan was born in Glace Bay Nova Scotia on March 20 1907 1 His parents were Samuel MacLennan a colliery physician and Katherine MacQuarrie Hugh also had an older sister named Frances 1 Samuel was a stern Calvinist while Katherine was creative warm and dreamy and both parents would be large influences on Hugh s character 2 In 1913 the family spent several months in London while Samuel took on further study to become a medical specialist 3 On returning to Canada they briefly lived in Sydney Nova Scotia before settling in Halifax 3 In December 1917 young Hugh experienced the Halifax Explosion which he would later write about in his first published novel Barometer Rising 4 From the ages of twelve to twenty one he slept in a tent in the family s backyard even in the cold winter possibly as an escape from his strict father 5 Hugh grew up believing in the importance of religion he and Frances regularly went to Sunday school and the family attended Presbyterian church services twice each Sunday 6 He was also active in sports and became especially good at tennis eventually winning the Nova Scotia men s double championship in 1927 7 Education editMacLennan and his sister were pushed extremely hard by their father to spend long hours learning the classics 8 While this was very difficult for Frances who had no interest in Greek Hugh grew to enjoy this field of study 8 Their father had an ambitious educational path planned for Hugh studying the classics at Dalhousie University getting a Rhodes Scholarship and then continuing his studies in England 9 While at Dalhousie he realized that his inner wish was to pursue an artistic career the influence of his creative mother 9 At Oxford he struggled with balancing his passion for Greek and Latin studies with these artistic instincts 10 In his first year at the university s Oriel College 11 MacLennan worked incredibly hard at his classics courses but was only able to achieve second class honours 12 By his second year he had resigned himself to such results and while still working diligently decided not to overwork himself as before 13 In his fourth year he was finding it increasingly difficult to concentrate on his studies and spent more and more time at tennis and writing poetry 14 In letters to his family from around this time are hints that he hoped to be a successful writer 15 In late 1931 MacLennan sent some of his poetry to three publishers including the firms of John Lane and Elkin Mathews but it was turned down 16 MacLennan s four years in Oxford gave him the opportunity to travel throughout Europe and he visited countries such as Switzerland France Greece and Italy 17 He spent some of his holidays lodging with a family in Germany through which he acquired a very good proficiency in German 18 His travels and his exposure to different political ideas caused MacLennan to begin to question his father s puritanical conservative attitudes that he had until then taken for granted 19 MacLennan won a 400 scholarship to continue his studies at Princeton University and despite his growing disinclination to keep studying the classics he decided to go there 20 This was partly to appease his father and partly because the Great Depression meant that there were few jobs available 21 In June 1932 while sailing home from England he met his future wife American Dorothy Duncan 22 Falling in love with her made him change his mind about Princeton 23 For one thing his father insisted he should not get married before becoming financially independent which would mean delaying marriage at least until his graduation In addition MacLennan was already unhappy about having to accept money from his father for the part of his Princeton studies that would not be covered by his scholarship 23 However his applications were rejected from both of the Canadian universities he applied to that had classics department positions opening thus he grudgingly agreed to go to Princeton after all 24 His three years at Princeton were unhappy The style of classical study there was very different from what he was used to at Oxford with Princeton s scholarship consist ing of extremely detailed analyses of classical texts and sources thorough but unoriginal 25 He began to rebel against his father s ideals he stopped going to church and put increasing energy into his writing at the expense of his studies furthermore in addition to resenting his financial dependence on his father he continued his relationship with Dorothy even though he knew his father would not approve of her American Lowland Scottish Christian Science business world background 26 Unpublished novels editAt Princeton MacLennan wrote his first novel So All Their Praises He found one publisher who was willing to take the manuscript as long as he made certain changes however this company went out of business before the book could be published 27 In spring 1935 he finished his PhD thesis Oxyrhynchus An Economic and Social Study about the decline of a Roman colony in Egypt 28 which was published by Princeton University Press and reprinted in 1968 by A M Hakkert 29 In 1935 there were very few teaching jobs available as a result of the Depression 30 and MacLennan s field of study the classics was in particular becoming less significant in North American education 20 He took a position at Lower Canada College in Montreal Quebec even though he felt it was beneath him as just his Dalhousie BA would have been a sufficient qualification for the job 30 He generally did not enjoy working there and resented the long hours required of him for low pay but was nonetheless a stimulating teacher at least for the brighter students 31 MacLennan would later poke fun at Lower Canada College in his depiction of Waterloo School in The Watch That Ends the Night 32 On June 22 1936 he and Dorothy were wed near her home in Wilmette Illinois and settled in Montreal 33 Meanwhile in 1934 1938 MacLennan was working on his second novel A Man Should Rejoice 34 Longman Green and Company and Duell Sloan and Pearce both showed strong interest in the novel but in the end neither published it 35 In February 1939 MacLennan s father died after suffering from high blood pressure It was a huge surprise to MacLennan as in the previous year they had just begun to become closer and to reconcile their opposing views 36 For several months after his father s death MacLennan continued to write letters to him in which he discussed his thoughts on the possibility and implications of a war in Europe 37 Barometer Rising editMain article Barometer Rising Dorothy convinced MacLennan that the failure of his first two novels was due to his having set one in Europe and the other in the United States she persuaded him to write about Canada the country he knew best 38 She told him that Nobody s going to understand Canada until she evolves a literature of her own and you re the fellow to start bringing Canadian novels up to date 38 Until then there had been a sporadic tradition of Anglo Canadian literature with such writers as Thomas Chandler Haliburton 1796 1865 Susanna Moodie 1803 1885 L M Montgomery 1874 1942 Stephen Leacock 1869 1944 Morley Callaghan 1903 1990 and W O Mitchell 1914 1998 MacLennan set out to define Canada for Canadians through a national novel 39 Barometer Rising his novel about the social class structure of Nova Scotia and the Halifax Explosion of 1917 was published in 1941 Later novels editHis most famous novel Two Solitudes a literary allegory for the tensions between English and French Canada followed in 1945 That year he left Lower Canada College Two Solitudes won MacLennan his first Governor General s Award for Fiction In 1948 MacLennan published The Precipice which again won the Governor General s Award The following year he published a collection of essays Cross Country which won the Governor General s Award for Non Fiction In 1951 MacLennan returned to teaching accepting a position at McGill University 40 In 1952 he was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and awarded the society s Lorne Pierce Medal 11 In 1954 he published another essay collection Thirty and Three which again won the Governor General s Award for Non Fiction citation needed In 1956 he was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature 11 One of MacLennan s students at McGill was Marian Engel 41 who became a noted Canadian novelist in the 1970s He served as her master s supervisor in c 1958 41 Another notable student was Leonard Cohen the popular songwriter poet and novelist Dorothy Duncan died in 1957 42 MacLennan married his second wife Aline Walker in 1959 That same year he published The Watch That Ends the Night which won his final Governor General s Award In 1967 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada 11 43 In 1985 he was made a Knight of the National Order of Quebec MacLennan continued to write and publish work with his final novel Voices in Time appearing in 1980 44 He died on November 9 1990 in Montreal Quebec 44 The Canadian band The Tragically Hip on their album Fully Completely have a song called Courage for Hugh MacLennan A passage from The Watch That Ends the Night is adapted for use in the song Bibliography editNovels edit Man Should Rejoice a critical edition by Hugh MacLennan edited and with an introduction by Colin Hill Ottawa University of Ottawa Press April 2019 ISBN 978 0 7766 2799 1 Barometer Rising 1941 Two Solitudes 1945 The Precipice 1948 Each Man s Son 1951 The Watch That Ends the Night 1957 Return of the Sphinx 1967 Voices in Time 1980 Non fiction edit Oxyrhyncus An Economic and Social Study 1935 Canadian Unity and Quebec 1942 Cross Country 1949 The Future of the Novel as an Art Form 1959 Scotchman s Return and Other Essays 1960 Seven Rivers of Canada 1961 US title The Rivers of Canada The Mackenzie the St Lawrence the Ottawa the Red the Saskatchewan the Fraser the St John 1962 The Colour of Canada 1967 The Other Side of Hugh MacLennan 1978 On Being a Maritime Writer 1984 Dear Marian Dear Hugh The MacLennan Engel Correspondence 1995 ed Christl Verduyn See also editTwo Solitudes film References editFootnotes edit a b Cameron 1981 pp 4 5 Hoy 1990 p 1 Cameron 1981 pp 5 6 a b Cameron 1981 p 8 Cameron 1981 p 13 Hoy 1990 p 1 Cameron 1981 p 15 Hoy 1990 p 1 Cameron 1981 p 12 Cameron 1981 pp 17 21 a b Cameron 1981 p 15 a b Cameron 1981 p 20 Cameron 1981 pp 23 58 a b c d MacLulich 1983 Chronology Cameron 1981 pp 26 27 33 Cameron 1981 p 48 Cameron 1981 p 56 Cameron 1981 pp 57 58 Cameron 1981 p 58 Cameron 1981 pp 31 32 34 36 39 40 55 56 Hoy 1990 p 1 Cameron 1981 pp 46 53 54 60 Cameron 1981 pp 43 58 59 a b Cameron 1981 p 62 Cameron 1981 pp 61 62 Cameron 1981 p 66 a b Cameron 1981 p 71 Cameron 1981 pp 72 73 Cameron 1981 p 73 Cameron 1981 p 77 Cameron 1981 p 87 Cameron 1981 p 91 Hoy 1990 p 1 Cameron 1981 p 91 a b Cameron 1981 p 101 Cameron 1981 pp 105 106 Cameron 1981 p 104 Cameron 1981 p 112 Cameron 1981 pp 107 112 119 Cameron 1981 p 119 120 Cameron 1981 p 121 Cameron 1981 pp 121 124 a b Cameron 1981 p 133 Peepre Bordessa 1990 p 52 Gibson Douglas Stories About Storytellers Hugh MacLennan Historica Canada Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 a b Verduyn 1995 p 1 MacLulich 1983 p 78 Order of Canada Hugh MacLennan C C C Q Ph D Governor General of Canada Archives Archived from the original on 2020 10 24 Retrieved 2022 03 08 a b Cameron 2015 Works cited edit Cameron Elspeth 1981 Hugh MacLennan A Writer s Life Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 5556 9 2015 Hugh MacLennan The Canadian Encyclopedia Toronto Historica Canada Archived from the original on May 3 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 Hoy Helen 1990 Hugh MacLennan and His Works Toronto ECW Press ISBN 978 1 55022 030 8 MacLulich T D 1983 Hugh MacLennan Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 978 0 8057 6555 7 Retrieved July 5 2020 Peepre Bordessa Mari 1990 Hugh MacLennan s National Trilogy Mapping a Canadian Identity 1940 1950 Helsinki Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia ISBN 978 951 41 0614 9 Verduyn Christl 1995 Introduction Dear Marian Dear Hugh The MacLennan Engel Correspondence By MacLennan Hugh Engel Marian Verduyn Christl ed Ottawa University of Ottawa Press pp 1 27 ISBN 978 0 7766 0403 9 Further reading editBourgoin Suzanne M Byers Paula K eds 2004 Hugh MacLennan Encyclopedia of World Biography Vol 10 2nd ed Detroit Michigan Gale pp 110 111 Archived from the original on January 27 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 Cockburn Robert H 1969 The Novels of Hugh MacLennan Montreal Harvest House ISBN 978 0 88772 108 3 Goetsch Paul ed 1973 Hugh MacLennan Toronto McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 978 0 07 077365 3 Lucas Alec 1970 Hugh MacLennan Toronto McClelland and Stewart OCLC 1035597997 Retrieved July 5 2020 Morley Patricia A 1972 The Immoral Moralists Hugh Maclennan and Leonard Cohen Toronto Clarke Irwin amp Company ISBN 978 0 7720 0555 7 Retrieved July 5 2020 Tierney Frank M ed 1994 Hugh MacLennan Ottawa University of Ottawa Press ISBN 978 0 7766 0389 6 Woodcock George 1969 Hugh MacLennan Toronto Copp Clark Publishing Company OCLC 612571738 External links editMacLennan project at McGill University Awards Preceded byGwethalyn Graham Governor General s Awardfor English language fiction1945 Succeeded byWinifred Bambrick Preceded byGabrielle Roy Governor General s Awardfor English language fiction1948 Succeeded byPhilip Child Preceded byThomas H Raddall Governor General s Award forEnglish language non fiction1949 With Robert MacGregor Dawson Succeeded byMarjorie Wilkins Campbell Preceded byC P Stacey Succeeded byW L Morton Preceded byE K Brown Lorne Pierce Medal1952 Succeeded byEarle Birney Preceded byN J Berrill Governor General s Award forEnglish language non fiction1954 With Arthur R M Lower Succeeded byN J Berrill Preceded byJ M S Careless Succeeded byDonald Creighton Preceded byColin McDougall Governor General s Awardfor English language fiction1959 Succeeded byBrian Moore Preceded byJean Gascon Molson Prize1967 With Georges Henri Levesque Succeeded byArthur Erickson Preceded byF R Scott Succeeded byAnne Hebert Succeeded byMarshall McLuhan No awardLast awarded toMarian Engel Canadian Authors AssociationAward for Fiction1981 Succeeded byJoy Kogawa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh MacLennan amp oldid 1197741745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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