Close X
Saturday, December 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2016 12:26 PM
    OTTAWA — George Elliott Clarke, a much-honoured Nova Scotia writer, has been named the country's seventh parliamentary poet laureate.
     
    He succeeds Michel Pleau, whose two-year term ended Dec. 31.
     
    Clarke's appointment was announced jointly by Senate Speaker George Furey and Commons Speaker Geoff Regan.
     
    The appointment was recommended by a selection committee chaired by parliamentary librarian Sonia L'Heureux and composed of Guy Berthiaume, the librarian and archivist of Canada, Official Languages Commissioner Graham Fraser and Pierre Lassonde, chair of the Canada Council for the Arts.
     
    Clarke won the 2001 Governor General's Award for Poetry for his book, "Execution Poems."
     
    He is also an accomplished playwright and literary critic and is an officer of the Order of Canada.
     
    "George Elliott Clarke has been a true ambassador of the work of Canadian poets," Furey said in a statement. "His contribution to Canada's cultural fabric is exceptional."
     
    Regan called him a versatile and engaging writer who "will bring great honour to the position."
     
    Clarke is a seventh-generation Canadian of African-American and Mi'kmaq heritage, who work has explored the African experience in Canada.
     
    "I'm humbled and honoured, inspired and eager," he said in a statement.
     
    Parliament established the post in 2001 to draw attention to the reading and writing of poetry.
     
    The poet laureate's duties include composing poetry for use in Parliament on occasions of state, sponsoring poetry readings, advising the parliamentary librarian on the library's cultural collection and related duties at the request of the two Speakers or the librarian.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border
    Using PVC pipes, digging through the earth or just throwing consignments over the barbed wire fence are some of the methods used by smugglers from Pakistan to push heroin consignments into India.

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift
    A mishap on a chair lift at a Saskatchewan ski hill left a seven-year-old dangling from the restraining bar by her helmet.

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole
    Saad Gaya, now 28, is serving time after pleading guilty to participating in a plot to bomb three Toronto targets, including the Toronto Stock Exchange, in protest of Canada's military involvement in Afghanistan.

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016
    Jaelyn Valenica was born New Year's Eve at 11:59 p.m. Her twin brother, Luis Valencia Jr., arrived at 12:01 a.m. on New Year's Day.

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces
    WINNIPEG — A bond-rating agency says recent tax increases in Alberta give more leeway to other western provinces to raise their own levies.

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials
    Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency has reportedly joined hands with banned Islamic militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) to "revive" the latter's base, according to intelligence sources.

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials