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Larissa Lai

Larissa Lai (born 1967) is an American-born Canadian novelist and literary critic. She is a recipient of the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction and Lambda Literary Foundation's 2020 Jim Duggins, PhD Outstanding Mid-Career Novelist Prize.[1]

Larissa Lai
Born1967 (age 56–57)
La Jolla, California
Occupation
  • Writer
  • poet
  • literary critic
NationalityCanadian
EducationUniversity of British Columbia (BA)
University of East Anglia (MA)
University of Calgary (PhD)
Notable worksSalt Fish Girl; When Fox is a Thousand; The Tiger Flu
Website
www.larissalai.com

Biography edit

Born in La Jolla, California, she grew up in St. John's, Newfoundland. She attended the University of British Columbia and, in 1990, graduated with a B.A. in Sociology. Subsequently, she earned her MA from the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, and in 2006, her PhD from the University of Calgary. She is currently an associate professor and Canada Research Chair (Tier II) in Creative Writing at the University of Calgary, where she directs The Insurgent Architects' House for Creative Writing.[2] Formerly she was an associate professor in Canadian Literature in the English Department at the University of British Columbia,[3] where she was also an active committee member of the reading series Play Chthonics at UBC's Green College, and edited poetry for the journal Canadian Literature from 2007 to 2010. A Chinese-Canadian, she has been cited as an example of "the growing elasticity of Canadian fiction and Canadian identity".[4]

Her first novel When Fox is a Thousand was published in 1995 by Press Gang Publishers and shortlisted for the 1996 Books in Canada First Novel Award.[5] When Fox Is a Thousand was republished by Arsenal Pulp Press in 2004, slightly revised, and with a new Afterword. Her second novel Salt Fish Girl was published in 2002 by Thomas Allen, and shortlisted for the Otherwise Award, the Sunburst Award and the City of Calgary W. O. Mitchell Award.

From 1997 to 1998 she was the Canadian Writer-in-Residence at the Calgary Distinguished Writers Program at University of Calgary, and was writer-in-residence at Simon Fraser University in 2006. She was awarded a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council postdoctoral fellowship at UBC in 2006–2007.

Lai has twice been an instructor at Clarion West science fiction and fantasy writer's workshop in 2004 and 2007. She was also an instructor at the original Clarion workshop at UCSD in 2009.

She has published articles and criticism in journals such as West Coast Line, Canadian Literature, The Capilano Review, English Studies in Canada and Fuse Magazine, as well as several anthologies including Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography and Bringing it Home: Women Talk About Feminism in Their Lives. In 2014, she published a non-fiction work, Slanting I, Imagining We: Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s, with Wilfrid Laurier University Press), which discusses the movement's context of activism, Canada's ethnic minority history, and writers such as Evelyn Lau and Wayson Choy.

An out lesbian,[6] she was one of the 1997 panelists at Write Out West, one of Canada's first-ever full-scale conferences of LGBT writers.[6]

Her 2018 novel The Tiger Flu won the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction at the 31st Lambda Literary Awards,[7] and was also nominated for 2019 Otherwise Award and Sunburst Award. The audiobook, released in May 2020 by ECW Press, was produced by Bespeak Audio Editions for an international audience and narrated by Canadian actor Lisa Truong.

Themes and Subjects edit

Lai's work explores intersections of identity in relation to race, culture, gender, and sexuality.[8] In Lai's novels, she draws inspiration from Chinese mythology and culture with a particular focus upon historical and mythological female figures; these historical, cultural, and mythical connections are integrated within a feminist science fiction framework in the novel Salt Fish Girl.[9] Complex romantic and sexual relationships between Asian women are a recurring subject within Lai's work and serve as the main focal point for her novels.[8]

In an interview with Canadian Women in the Literary Arts, Lai discussed her book Slanting I, Imagining We within the context of being involved within the creative and literary fields of Toronto in the 1990s.[10] Lai said of her work during this time: "For me it was a time when questions of race, class, gender and sexuality were open to public debate in a broad and engaged ways. They still held their contentiousness, but productively so. Questions of history, movement, representation and justice were all available for interrogation. The work was not easy. The questions were personal and political and incredibly difficult to answer."[10] Lai cites discussions and interactions with other authors of color during this time as immensely influential and formative for her own work.

Critical reception edit

Lai's novels have generated much acclaim for their innovative narratives that help readers understand the modern diasporic experience. Her work has also generated a relatively large amount of scholarship and criticism, mostly Canadian, with the exception of a US monograph, The Influence of Daoism on Asian-Canadian Writers (Edwin Mellen Press, 2008).[11]

Many scholars emphasize the contributions that Lai has made critiquing common understandings of race, gender, and national identity. Malissa Phung analyzes Lai as part of Chinese diaspora, and particularly studies how her works investigate concepts such as immigrant shame and what she calls "postmemory."[12] Stephanie Oliver suggests that Lai innovatively uses smell as an indicator of the "politics of representation, regimes of racialization, the power of the gaze, and the dynamics of visibility and invisibility that are key to processes of social marginalization" of the diasporic experience, rather than the more common visual and auditory frameworks.[13]

Sharlee Reimer suggests that Lai's work casts common Enlightenment ideas as racist and limiting, and uses her novels to suggest new ways of understanding, such as her use of cyborgs in Salt Fish Girl to criticize origin stories.[14] Nicholas Birns situates Lai's work as postcolonial transfeminist, prominently featured in the Canadian canon but not as well known internationally, but nonetheless broadly relevant for offering "multiple, diasporic identities to counter the repressive rhetoric of monolithic globalization".[11]

Professors Wei Li and John M. Chen published a 466-page A Study of the Literary Influence of Socialist Theory in Major English-Speaking Countries (Chinese Social Sciences Press) in Beijing in 2018; this highest academic award-winning monograph across China features numerous comments on Lai as a critic, poet, and novelist from an interdisciplinary and multicultural perspective. The study is, in part, a continuation of Professor John M. Chen's The Influence of Daoism on Asian-Canadian Writers (Edwin Mellen Press, 2008).[citation needed]

Professor John M. Chen's Chinese Canadian Literature and Criticism: A Multi-disciplinary and Cross-cultural Approach, Vol. 1, is forthcoming with Springer in 2022. It covers multiple aspects of the genesis and developments of Lai's poetics, politics, aesthetics, and ethics from the feminist, Daoist, post-colonial, Confucian, socialist, gender, Buddhist, and Marxist perspectives, while situating Lai and other Chinese Canadian writers and critics in the context of Chinese and Canadian literary and intellectual traditions since the dawn of Chinese civilization some 5000 years ago.[citation needed]

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

  • —— (1995). When Fox is a Thousand (paperback ed.). Press Gang Publishers. p. 236. ISBN 978-0889740419.
  • —— (2002). Salt Fish Girl (paperback ed.). Thomas Allen Publishers. p. 269. ISBN 978-0887621116.
  • —— (2018). The Tiger Flu (paperback ed.). Arsenal Pulp Press. p. 334. ISBN 978-1551527314.
  • —— (2022). The Lost Century (paperback ed.). Arsenal Pulp Press. p. 374. ISBN 978-1551528977.

Books of poetry edit

Chapbooks and short stories edit

  • "New Reeboks" (1994)
  • "The Home Body" (1994)
  • "Water, and other Measures of Distance" (1996)
  • "The Voice of the Blind Concubine" (1996)
  • "The Peacock Hen" (1996)
  • "April’s New Apartment" (1997)
  • "S" (1998)
  • "Pomegranate Tree" (2000)
  • "Fish Bones" (2000)
  • "Nu Wa" (2001)
  • "The Combing" (2004)
  • Rachel (2004) –
  • "I Love Liver: A Romance" (2005)
  • Eggs in the Basement (2009) Nomados
  • Nascent Fashion (2004)
  • "The Starfish's Groom" (2010)
  • "What the Wyliei Wanted" (2014)

Non-fiction edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Special Awards | Lambda Literary Awards - Lambda Literary". Retrieved 2020-05-20.
  2. ^ "Faculty page". University of Calgary. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  3. ^ . University of British Columbia. Archived from the original on 22 August 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  4. ^ Van Luven, Lynne (June 29, 1997). "True North: Canadian Literature Isn't What You Think". The New York Times Book Review. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  5. ^ "Fraser wins First Novel prize". Toronto Star. April 26, 1996. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Gay and Lesbian: Write Out West". The Province, November 6, 1997.
  7. ^ "Canadians win three Lambda awards for LGBTQ writing". Toronto Star, June 4, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Ho, Tamara (January 4, 2012). "Larissa Lai's "New Cultural Politics of Intimacy": Animal. Asian. Cyborg". SocialText Online. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
  9. ^ Joo, Hee-Sung Serenity (2014). "Reproduction, Reincarnation, and Human Cloning: Literary and Racial Forms in Larissa Lai's Salt Fish Girl". Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 55: 46–59. doi:10.1080/00111619.2011.625999. S2CID 161574071.
  10. ^ a b Jerome, Gillian; Quartermain, Meredith. . Canadian Women in the Literary Arts. Archived from the original on 2018-04-19. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
  11. ^ a b Nicholas Birns (2008). "The Earth's Revenge: Nature, Transfeminism and Diaspora in Larissa Lai's Salt Fish Girl". In Lee, Robert A (ed.). China fictions, English language : literary essays in diaspora, memory, story (Online ed.). Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 978-9042023512.
  12. ^ Phung, Malissa (2012). "The Diasporic Inheritance of Postmemory and Immigrant Shame in the Novels of Larissa Lai". Postcolonial Text. 7.
  13. ^ Oliver, Stephanie (Spring 2011). "Diffuse Connections: Smell and Diasporic Subjectivity in Larissa Lai's "Salt Fish Girl."". Canadian Literature (208).
  14. ^ Reimer, Sharlee (2010). "Troubling Origins: Cyborg Politics in Larissa Lai's Salt Fish Girl". Atlantis. 35 (1): 4.
  15. ^ a b "Larissa Lai". Poetry Foundation. 2018-12-21. Retrieved 2018-12-21.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Larissa Lai's records, held by Simon Fraser University's Special Collections and Rare Books

larissa, born, 1967, american, born, canadian, novelist, literary, critic, recipient, 2018, lambda, literary, award, lesbian, fiction, lambda, literary, foundation, 2020, duggins, outstanding, career, novelist, prize, 2017, asian, american, literature, festiva. Larissa Lai born 1967 is an American born Canadian novelist and literary critic She is a recipient of the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction and Lambda Literary Foundation s 2020 Jim Duggins PhD Outstanding Mid Career Novelist Prize 1 Larissa LaiLai at the 2017 Asian American Literature FestivalBorn1967 age 56 57 La Jolla CaliforniaOccupationWriter poet literary criticNationalityCanadianEducationUniversity of British Columbia BA University of East Anglia MA University of Calgary PhD Notable worksSalt Fish Girl When Fox is a Thousand The Tiger FluWebsitewww wbr larissalai wbr com Contents 1 Biography 2 Themes and Subjects 3 Critical reception 4 Bibliography 4 1 Novels 4 2 Books of poetry 4 3 Chapbooks and short stories 4 4 Non fiction 5 References 6 External linksBiography editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Larissa Lai news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Born in La Jolla California she grew up in St John s Newfoundland She attended the University of British Columbia and in 1990 graduated with a B A in Sociology Subsequently she earned her MA from the University of East Anglia in Norwich England and in 2006 her PhD from the University of Calgary She is currently an associate professor and Canada Research Chair Tier II in Creative Writing at the University of Calgary where she directs The Insurgent Architects House for Creative Writing 2 Formerly she was an associate professor in Canadian Literature in the English Department at the University of British Columbia 3 where she was also an active committee member of the reading series Play Chthonics at UBC s Green College and edited poetry for the journal Canadian Literature from 2007 to 2010 A Chinese Canadian she has been cited as an example of the growing elasticity of Canadian fiction and Canadian identity 4 Her first novel When Fox is a Thousand was published in 1995 by Press Gang Publishers and shortlisted for the 1996 Books in Canada First Novel Award 5 When Fox Is a Thousand was republished by Arsenal Pulp Press in 2004 slightly revised and with a new Afterword Her second novel Salt Fish Girl was published in 2002 by Thomas Allen and shortlisted for the Otherwise Award the Sunburst Award and the City of Calgary W O Mitchell Award From 1997 to 1998 she was the Canadian Writer in Residence at the Calgary Distinguished Writers Program at University of Calgary and was writer in residence at Simon Fraser University in 2006 She was awarded a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council postdoctoral fellowship at UBC in 2006 2007 Lai has twice been an instructor at Clarion West science fiction and fantasy writer s workshop in 2004 and 2007 She was also an instructor at the original Clarion workshop at UCSD in 2009 She has published articles and criticism in journals such as West Coast Line Canadian Literature The Capilano Review English Studies in Canada and Fuse Magazine as well as several anthologies including Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography and Bringing it Home Women Talk About Feminism in Their Lives In 2014 she published a non fiction work Slanting I Imagining We Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s with Wilfrid Laurier University Press which discusses the movement s context of activism Canada s ethnic minority history and writers such as Evelyn Lau and Wayson Choy An out lesbian 6 she was one of the 1997 panelists at Write Out West one of Canada s first ever full scale conferences of LGBT writers 6 Her 2018 novel The Tiger Flu won the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction at the 31st Lambda Literary Awards 7 and was also nominated for 2019 Otherwise Award and Sunburst Award The audiobook released in May 2020 by ECW Press was produced by Bespeak Audio Editions for an international audience and narrated by Canadian actor Lisa Truong Themes and Subjects editLai s work explores intersections of identity in relation to race culture gender and sexuality 8 In Lai s novels she draws inspiration from Chinese mythology and culture with a particular focus upon historical and mythological female figures these historical cultural and mythical connections are integrated within a feminist science fiction framework in the novel Salt Fish Girl 9 Complex romantic and sexual relationships between Asian women are a recurring subject within Lai s work and serve as the main focal point for her novels 8 In an interview with Canadian Women in the Literary Arts Lai discussed her book Slanting I Imagining We within the context of being involved within the creative and literary fields of Toronto in the 1990s 10 Lai said of her work during this time For me it was a time when questions of race class gender and sexuality were open to public debate in a broad and engaged ways They still held their contentiousness but productively so Questions of history movement representation and justice were all available for interrogation The work was not easy The questions were personal and political and incredibly difficult to answer 10 Lai cites discussions and interactions with other authors of color during this time as immensely influential and formative for her own work Critical reception editLai s novels have generated much acclaim for their innovative narratives that help readers understand the modern diasporic experience Her work has also generated a relatively large amount of scholarship and criticism mostly Canadian with the exception of a US monograph The Influence of Daoism on Asian Canadian Writers Edwin Mellen Press 2008 11 Many scholars emphasize the contributions that Lai has made critiquing common understandings of race gender and national identity Malissa Phung analyzes Lai as part of Chinese diaspora and particularly studies how her works investigate concepts such as immigrant shame and what she calls postmemory 12 Stephanie Oliver suggests that Lai innovatively uses smell as an indicator of the politics of representation regimes of racialization the power of the gaze and the dynamics of visibility and invisibility that are key to processes of social marginalization of the diasporic experience rather than the more common visual and auditory frameworks 13 Sharlee Reimer suggests that Lai s work casts common Enlightenment ideas as racist and limiting and uses her novels to suggest new ways of understanding such as her use of cyborgs in Salt Fish Girl to criticize origin stories 14 Nicholas Birns situates Lai s work as postcolonial transfeminist prominently featured in the Canadian canon but not as well known internationally but nonetheless broadly relevant for offering multiple diasporic identities to counter the repressive rhetoric of monolithic globalization 11 Professors Wei Li and John M Chen published a 466 page A Study of the Literary Influence of Socialist Theory in Major English Speaking Countries Chinese Social Sciences Press in Beijing in 2018 this highest academic award winning monograph across China features numerous comments on Lai as a critic poet and novelist from an interdisciplinary and multicultural perspective The study is in part a continuation of Professor John M Chen s The Influence of Daoism on Asian Canadian Writers Edwin Mellen Press 2008 citation needed Professor John M Chen s Chinese Canadian Literature and Criticism A Multi disciplinary and Cross cultural Approach Vol 1 is forthcoming with Springer in 2022 It covers multiple aspects of the genesis and developments of Lai s poetics politics aesthetics and ethics from the feminist Daoist post colonial Confucian socialist gender Buddhist and Marxist perspectives while situating Lai and other Chinese Canadian writers and critics in the context of Chinese and Canadian literary and intellectual traditions since the dawn of Chinese civilization some 5000 years ago citation needed Bibliography editNovels edit 1995 When Fox is a Thousand paperback ed Press Gang Publishers p 236 ISBN 978 0889740419 2002 Salt Fish Girl paperback ed Thomas Allen Publishers p 269 ISBN 978 0887621116 2018 The Tiger Flu paperback ed Arsenal Pulp Press p 334 ISBN 978 1551527314 2022 The Lost Century paperback ed Arsenal Pulp Press p 374 ISBN 978 1551528977 Books of poetry edit Wong Rita 2008 Sybil Unrest paperback ed Linebooks p 112 ISBN 978 0978498139 15 2019 Automaton Biographies paperback ed Arsenal Pulp Press p 168 ISBN 978 1551522920 15 2021 Iron Goddess of Mercy paperback ed Arsenal Pulp Press p 176 ISBN 978 1551528441 Chapbooks and short stories edit New Reeboks 1994 The Home Body 1994 Water and other Measures of Distance 1996 The Voice of the Blind Concubine 1996 The Peacock Hen 1996 April s New Apartment 1997 S 1998 Pomegranate Tree 2000 Fish Bones 2000 Nu Wa 2001 The Combing 2004 Rachel 2004 I Love Liver A Romance 2005 Eggs in the Basement 2009 Nomados Nascent Fashion 2004 The Starfish s Groom 2010 What the Wyliei Wanted 2014 Non fiction edit Slanting I Imagining We Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s 2014 Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 0 88920 417 9 References edit Special Awards Lambda Literary Awards Lambda Literary Retrieved 2020 05 20 Faculty page University of Calgary Retrieved 28 December 2021 Faculty page University of British Columbia Archived from the original on 22 August 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2013 Van Luven Lynne June 29 1997 True North Canadian Literature Isn t What You Think The New York Times Book Review Retrieved 27 May 2013 Fraser wins First Novel prize Toronto Star April 26 1996 Retrieved 27 May 2013 a b Gay and Lesbian Write Out West The Province November 6 1997 Canadians win three Lambda awards for LGBTQ writing Toronto Star June 4 2019 a b Ho Tamara January 4 2012 Larissa Lai s New Cultural Politics of Intimacy Animal Asian Cyborg SocialText Online Retrieved 21 December 2018 Joo Hee Sung Serenity 2014 Reproduction Reincarnation and Human Cloning Literary and Racial Forms in Larissa Lai s Salt Fish Girl Critique Studies in Contemporary Fiction 55 46 59 doi 10 1080 00111619 2011 625999 S2CID 161574071 a b Jerome Gillian Quartermain Meredith An Interview with Larissa Lai Canadian Women in the Literary Arts Archived from the original on 2018 04 19 Retrieved 2018 04 19 a b Nicholas Birns 2008 The Earth s Revenge Nature Transfeminism and Diaspora in Larissa Lai s Salt Fish Girl In Lee Robert A ed China fictions English language literary essays in diaspora memory story Online ed Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 978 9042023512 Phung Malissa 2012 The Diasporic Inheritance of Postmemory and Immigrant Shame in the Novels of Larissa Lai Postcolonial Text 7 Oliver Stephanie Spring 2011 Diffuse Connections Smell and Diasporic Subjectivity in Larissa Lai s Salt Fish Girl Canadian Literature 208 Reimer Sharlee 2010 Troubling Origins Cyborg Politics in Larissa Lai s Salt Fish Girl Atlantis 35 1 4 a b Larissa Lai Poetry Foundation 2018 12 21 Retrieved 2018 12 21 External links editOfficial website Larissa Lai s records held by Simon Fraser University s Special Collections and Rare Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Larissa Lai amp oldid 1217668541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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