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Parallel Careers

20 Episodes

24 minutes | Jul 25, 2022
Episode 7 | Eufemia Fantetti
In this episode, Eufemia Fantetti describes how she approaches teaching with compassion, outlines the challenges of writing about emotional trauma, and shares how she uses humour as a superpower and a shield. She discusses:  0:52 | teachers who take their frustrations out on students and why it’s important to provide practical tips in every lesson  4:34 | writing food and complicated relationships in her short story collection A Recipe for Disaster and Other Unlikely Tales of Love  8:44 | finding the narrative frame for her memoir My Father, Fortune-tellers & Me and how the “fool’s journey” provided a useful template 11:46 | watching true-crime documentaries during the pandemic and the insights it gave her into writing about family  14:01 | helping students enrich their creative non-fiction by “mapping the personal and charting the global” 17:15 | sharing the Molisan dialect with her father and how her fascination with language led to the anthology Tongues: On Longing and Belonging Through Language  21:14 | working on the Humber Literary Review, imagining rejection as a four-burner oven and embracing writing as a life-long pursuit that you can always improve at Guest bio:  Eufemia Fantetti is a graduate of The Writer’s Studio at SFU and the University of Guelph’s MFA in Creative Writing. Her fiction, nonfiction and plays have been published in the anthologies Love Me True, Exploring Voice and Body & Soul. Her work has also appeared in The New Quarterly, Event and the Globe and Mail. She is a winner of the Event Magazine Non-Fiction Contest, and a three-time winner of the annual Accenti Writing Contest. Her work has been nominated for the Creative Nonfiction Collective Readers' Choice Award and was listed as notable in Best American Essays (2009). Eufemia’s memoir, My Father, Fortune-tellers & Me was released in October 2019 by Mother Tongue Publishing. Her first book, A Recipe for Disaster & Other Unlikely Tales of Love (Mother Tongue, 2013), was runner up for the 2013 Danuta Gleed Literary Award, a winner of the 2014 F.G. Bressani Prize.  About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.
23 minutes | Jun 27, 2022
Episode 6 | Ian Williams
"I think it's really important, even if you are not, you know, not gonna be a writer, to still acknowledge that you have right to creative production. There's nothing that says that you have to stop drawing or, or painting after middle school or high school. Celebrate your capacity to make something out of nothing."In this episode, Ian Williams discusses tackling complicated ethical issues in his writing and finding ways to maintain lifelong creativity.  He discusses: 0:50 | Examining thorny moral and ethical questions through a mathematical model in his poetry collection Word Problems 5:10 | Sticking his poems on the wall and the point in the writing process where he “surrenders to the work,” giving it precedence over the comfort of closure 6:45 | Asking his students to write every day and how he adapts the assignment to different course levels  8:33| His essay collection Disorientation, about what it feels like to be a Black man moving through the world, and writing directly to the reader without the filter of fiction  13:00 | Taking his book draft out to dinner and the importance of recovering joy in the writing process  16:41 | Accruing a character through a repertoire of physical gestures  18:29 | Decentring the “I” by asking students to write an autobiographical poem without any people or pronouns in it  20:20 | Why it’s critical to make plans for our creative lives and how creativity is not a failure because it's a part of your life rather than all of your life Guest bio:  Ian Williams is the author of six books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. His latest book, Disorientation, considers the impact of racial encounters on ordinary people. His novel, Reproduction, won the Scotiabank Giller Prize and was published in Canada, the US, the UK, and Italy. His poetry collection, Word Problems, converts the ethical and political issues of our time into math and grammar problems. It won the Raymond Souster Award. His previous collection, Personals, was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book Award. His short story collection, Not Anyone’s Anything, won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award for the best first collection of short fiction in Canada. His first book, You Know Who You Are, was a finalist for the ReLit Poetry Prize. He is a trustee for the Griffin Poetry Prize.  Williams completed his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto. After several years teaching poetry in the School of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia, Williams returned to the University of Toronto as a tenured professor of English. He was the 2014-2015 Canadian Writer-in-Residence for the University of Calgary’s Distinguished Writers Program. In 2022, he will be the Visiting Fellow at the American Library in Paris. About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and pract
21 minutes | May 27, 2022
Episode 5 | Tanis MacDonald
“The other thing I say in Out of Line after ‘if you don't have community, art will break your heart’ is your heart will be broken anyway, eventually, but it's better with community. You will recover faster and you won't die of heartbreak if you have community.”In this episode, Tanis MacDonald encourages us to challenge the voices in the canon that do not satisfy, and examines her changing relationship with both walking and art.She discusses: 1:06 | How poetry attracts people with its strangeness and makes space for two disparate ideas to sit alongside each other. 1:58 | Writing about a female experience of the city in her poetry collection Mobile. 4:40 | Reclaiming the “Crazy Jane” trope and writing about a character who is struggling to leave capitalism and colonialism behind. 7:06 | Considering questions of mobility in her forthcoming book Straggle: Adventures in Walking While Female.  11:24 | Being vulnerable with students and using her own work to teach revision strategies. 14:26 | Her book Out of Line: Daring to be an Artist Outside the Big City and how to measure success as a writer.Guest Bio: Tanis MacDonald is an essayist, poet, professor and free-range literary animal. She is the host of the podcast Watershed Writers, and the author of Out of Line: Daring to Be an Artist Outside the Big City. Her essay “Mondegreen Girls” won the Open Seasons Award for Creative Nonfiction in 2021. She identifies as a bad birder, and lives near Ose’kowáhne in southwestern Ontario as a grateful guest on traditional Haudenosaunee territory.About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. If you like our podcast, please leave a review—it really helps other listeners find our show! Thank you! You can find Tanis’s work here:    Straggle: Adventures in Walking While Female Mobile Out of Line: Daring to be an Artist Outside the Big City GUSH: Menstrual Manifestos for our Times Rue the Day The music you heard on this episode was composed by Amadeo Ventura. You can hear more of his music at amadeoventura.weebly.com. Visit TNQ.ca/parallel to access more of Tanis MacDonald’s writing and teaching tips.
23 minutes | Apr 25, 2022
Episode 4 | Adam Pottle
“I don't believe that I would be a writer if I wasn’t Deaf. I think that being born deaf kind of derailed me from the kind of path that, that the men in my family tend to take. My dad worked for CN Rail, and my brother worked for CN Rail, and my dad's dad worked for CN Rail. So being Deaf kind of took me away and steered me away from, from that path and down a more artistic and imaginative path.”In this episode, Adam Pottle shares the importance of believing in the story you want to tell and how creativity is a necessity for a disabled life. He discusses: 0:40 | His work as Writer in Residence at Sheridan College and how he hopes it will be an opportunity to encourage more Deaf and disabled writers to tell their stories. 1:58 | The development of his first play Ultrasound, and dramaturg Yvette Nolan’s advice to “raise the stakes, raise the stakes, raise the stakes.” 5:11 | His research into the Nazi’s T4 Euthanasia program and its victim and his experience touring the clinic described in his book, The Bus. 8:15 | The ongoing relevance of The Bus, in an ableist world where eugenicist attitudes still persist. 14:58 | His memoir Voice about growing up deaf in a hearing family, and using the persona of Lemmy from Motorhead to bring “color commentary” to the book. 17:00 | Asking students to write a paragraph about themselves from the perspective of someone who loves them and the benefits of using this exercise during the pandemic. 18: 24 | Developing The Black Drum, a Deaf musical, and how he provided a blueprint for the actors to interpret, creating music out of their own rhythms. 20:15 | The windfall awaiting the first major publisher, film studio and art gallery that truly recognizes the potential of disabled artists.  Guest Bio:Adam Pottle's books include the award-winning novels The Bus and Mantis Dreams, along with the critically acclaimed memoir Voice. His plays include the groundbreaking piece The Black Drum, the world's first-ever all-Deaf musical. He is the only Deaf person in a hearing family, and all his work focuses on disabled characters. He is currently working on the script for a new graphic novel while shopping his new novel Apparitions. He lives in Saskatoon.About the Podcast:Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach.Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development.Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits:Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.If you like our podcast, please leave a review—it really helps other listeners find our show! Thank you!Visit TNQ.ca to access more of Adam Pottle’s writing and teaching tips, including web extras about mentorship and cultural appropriation. You can find Adam’s work here:Voice. Adam Pottle on Writing with Deafness  The BusThe Black Drum Beautiful Mutants   
25 minutes | Mar 28, 2022
Episode 3 | Ayelet Tsabari
“I think that there's something inspiring to students about knowing that I don't come from an academic background. My career experience in my thirties—I was a waitress and a house cleaner. So I think that that's actually a good balance to have in an institute that teaches something creative.”In this episode, Ayelet Tsabari discusses writing about contested places, giving voice to her community and how stories can resonate in unexpected ways. She discusses: 1:46 | Being Writer-in-Residence at the Toronto Public Library and running drop-in workshops for immigrants and people who write in their second language 3:41 | Writing place as a mirror of your characters’ emotions 6:40 | Getting workshop feedback that confused cultural differences with style, and how she re-discovered her own authorial voice 8:30 | Spending a year only reading books by BIPOC writers 11:10 | Delving into difficult emotions when writing her memoir The Art of Leaving 14:00 | the impossibility of trying to fully capture her grandmother in the text 16:55 | Her research into the literary traditions of Yemeni women’s songs 20:00 | Helping students re-focus their attention on the world and engage with it  Guest Bio:Ayelet Tsabari was born in Israel to a large family of Yemeni descent. She wrote her first story in English in 2007. She is the author of The Art of Leaving, winner of the Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Memoir, finalist for the Writer’s Trust Hilary Weston Prize, finalist for the Vine Awards for Nonfiction, and an Apple Books, CBC Books, and Kirkus Review Best Book of 2019. Her first book, The Best Place on Earth, won both the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and the Edward Lewis Wallant Award for Jewish Fiction, was longlisted for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, was a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice and Kirkus Review Best Book of 2016, and has been published internationally. Her translations appeared in the New Quarterly, Berlin Quarterly, Paper Brigade, and Mantis. She teaches creative writing at The University of King’s College MFA, the University of Guelph Creative Writing MFA, and at Tel Aviv University. She lives in Toronto.About the Podcast:Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach.Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Credits:Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.If you like our podcast, please leave a review—it really helps other listeners find our show! Thank you!Visit TNQ.ca to access more of Ayelet’s writing and teaching tips, including web extras about the vulnerability required by creative non-fiction, and her new anthology Tongues: On Longing and Belonging through Language.You can find Ayelet’s work here:The Art of Leaving The Best Place on Earth Tongues: On Longing and Belonging through LanguageRecommended reading: The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop: How To Decolonize the Creative Classroom by Felicia Rose ChavezSalt Houses by Hala AlyanMeander Spiral Explode by Jane Allison
34 minutes | Feb 28, 2022
Episode 2 | Richard Van Camp
“You want to be continually energized by your students. And that's really the dance of mentorship. And that's the gift of mentorship, is that when you finally get an afternoon to return to your own work, you're going with that hunger that they showed you all the time.”In this episode, Richard Van Camp discusses his life’s work as a storyteller and writer to pass on teachings for the next generation, and his excitement about the future of Indigenous literature.  0:29 | Realizing as a child that the school curriculum he was learning was cultural theft and how it inspired him to interview Elders and write down their knowledge for future generations 4:27 | Becoming the Handibus driver in his community and recording community matriarchs 5:00 | Studying Native Management Studies at Arctic College and making the choice to pursue writing over politics 8:39 | Getting to meet author and Sahtu Dene Elder George Blondin 11: 23 | How he’s carried Maureen Medved’s advice on teaching into his work with the Audible mentorship program 13:26 | Why he encourages his students to “write for revenge” 15:25 | Recording Elders in Fort McKay and Fort Chipewyan and the teaching he learned from James Grandjambe 22:55 | Developing Gather: Richard Van Camp on Storytelling and sharing interviews from Elders who have passed with their living descendants 25:25 | How seeing a “World’s Greatest Dad” mug completely changed the storyline in his book When We Play Our Drums, They Sing! 30:46 | Ending in the splits  Guest Bio:Richard Van Camp is a proud member of the Dogrib (Tłıcho) Nation from Fort Smith, NWT, Canada. He is a graduate of the En’owkin International School of Writing, the University of Victoria’s Creative Writing BFA Program, and the Master’s Degree in Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia. He is an internationally renowned storyteller and best-selling author. His novel, The Lesser Blessed, is now a movie with First Generation Films and premiered in September of 2012 at the Toronto International Film Festival. He is the author of five collections of short stories, six baby books, three children’s books, five comics and much more.About the Podcast:Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach.Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development.Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits:Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.Access more free writing and teaching tips from Richard Van Camp at: tnq.ca/parallelYou can find Richard’s work here: Gather: Richard Van Camp on Storytelling The Lesser BlessedAngel Wing Splash PatternMoccasin Square GardensWe Sang You Home
23 minutes | Jan 28, 2022
Episode 1 | Dina Del Bucchia
“I think I was a bad writer before I discovered that I could use humor effectively and that I could use it at all. Being able to crack into just something and use humor kind of broke open a little bit of a creative gate that was really holding me back.” In this episode, Dina Del Bucchia discusses developing her own comedic voice outside an academic setting and bringing humour to cultural critique. She discusses: 1:39 | Marrying humour to the emotional core of the story 3:15 | Encouraging students to write comedy that “punches up” in her introduction to comedic forms class 6:09 | How seeing Wooly Mammoth skeletons at Whitehorse’s Beringia Interpretive Centre inspired her to write her collection “It's a Big Deal!” 8:44 | Writing about class from a working class perspective, and selling $40 business books that will never be released in paperback 12:43 | Her story collection “Don’t Tell Me What to Do” and writing women’s anger 15:20 | Getting students to write song lyrics in class and the unexpected pandemic content it produced 18:22 | Hosting the podcast Can’t Lit and giving a platform to writers from smaller presses Guest Bio: Dina Del Bucchia is the author of three collections of poetry, Coping with Emotions and Otters (Talonbooks, 2013), Blind Items (Insomniac Press, 2014), and Rom Com (Talonbooks, 2015), written with Daniel Zomparelli. She also hosts Can’t Lit, a podcast on Canadian literature and culture, with Jen Sookfong Lee. Her short story, "Under the 'I'," was a finalist for the Writers' Trust RBC Bronwen Wallace Award in 2012. Her first collection of short stories, Don’t Tell Me What to Do, was  published in fall 2017 with Arsenal Pulp Press. She is a senior editor of Poetry Is Dead magazine and is the Artistic Director of the Real Vancouver Writers' Series. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, where she currently is an instructor.   About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.   Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more free writing and teaching tips from Dina Del Bucchia at: tnq.ca/parallel You can find Dina’s work here:  It’s a Big Deal!  Don't Tell Me What to Do  Rom Com Blind Items Coping with Emotions and Otters
25 minutes | Dec 8, 2021
Episode 12 | Carrianne Leung
"Writing's my playground. So I feel very free. I feel, you know, we're in a world where there's not a lot of freedom. I feel like I'm free on the page." In this episode, Carrianne Leung challenges established ideas about craft and teaching, and shares how her writing aims to show the complexity and fullness of being human. She discusses: How her work as a sociologist intersects with her work as a fiction writer in its concernswith the narratives we tell ourselves and how she’s rethinking the traditional writer’sworkshop 0:45 The development of her first novel, The Wondrous Woo and magic realism as a politicalchoice 5:03 Moving beyond stereotypes about multiculturalism in her story collection That Time I Loved You  9:32 How cross-stitching helped keep her creative and connected during the pandemic 15:00 Imagining the apocalypse through the eyes of a raccoon in her new novel The After 18:26  Asking a group of middle school students to pinpoint the moment when they no longer felt like children and the care that fostered between participants. 21:02 You can find Carrianne ’s work here: The Wondrous Woo https://www.inanna.ca/product/wondrous-woo/That Time I Loved You https://www.harpercollins.ca/9781443452861/that-time-i-loved-you/The music you heard on this episode was composed by Amadeo Ventura. You can hear more of his music at amadeoventura.weebly.com.Visit TNQ.ca to access more of Carrianne Leung’s writing and teaching tips, including web extras about mentorship and cultural appropriation. If you like our podcast, please leave a review — it really helps other listeners find our show! Thank you!Guest bio:Carrianne Leung is a fiction writer and educator. She holds a Ph.D. in Sociology and Equity Studies from OISE/University of Toronto. Her debut novel, The Wondrous Woo, published by Inanna Publications was shortlisted for the 2014 Toronto Book Awards. Her collection of linked stories, That Time I Loved You, was released in 2018 by HarperCollins and in 2019 in the US by Liveright Publishing. It received starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, and was named as one of the Best Books of 2018 by CBC, That Time I Loved You was shortlisted for the Toronto Book Awards 2019, long listed for Canada Reads 2019 and was awarded the Danuta Gleed Literary Award 2019. Leung’s work has also appeared in the Puritan, Ricepaper, the Globe and Mail, Room, Prairie Fire and Open Book Ontario. Her third book titled, The After, will be released by Harper Collins Canada in 2022. She is currently faculty at the MFA program at the University of Guelph, where she teaches a course called “Decolonial Fiction.” Recommended reading: Craft in the Real World: Rethinking Fiction Writing and Workshopping by Matthew Salesses The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop: How To Decolonize the Creative Classroom by Felicia Rose Chavez
25 minutes | Nov 29, 2021
Episode 11 | Sheryda Warrener
"I think with a poem, you always want to have something at stake that you just are not going to be able to answer, but you keep trying to get at it in this way, in that way, in this way."In this episode, Sheryda Warrener explores how poems anchor us in the world, the importance of making space for ritual, and how her students build material from sensory experience. She discusses: · Teaching English to children and adults in Japan and Sweden, and how the experiences shaped her as a writer and educator (0:50) · Wandering the aisles of Home Hardware looking at form in the world and other student-led field trips in her Hybrid Forms class (6:13) · Using the voice of a Russian cosmonaut in her collection Floating is Everything to explore shifts in perspective and the tension between delight and grief (12:03) · Looking at visual art as a practice and a process and how it informs her new manuscript (16:52) · Finding her footing in the 200-person lecture hall and using Window Swap as a way to explore outer and inner landscapes (19:40)Guest Bio:  Sheryda Warrener is the author of two poetry collections: Hard Feelings (Snare, 2010) and Floating is Everything (Nightwood, 2015). Her work can be found in Event, The Fiddlehead, Grain, Hazlitt, and The Believer, among others. She is a recipient of The Puritan’s Thomas Morton Memorial Prize for poetry, and recent poems have been selected for Best Canadian Poetry and The Next Wave: An Anthology of 21stCentury Canadian Poetry. She teaches courses in hybrid forms, and poem-making.About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.   Access more information and recommended readings from Sheryda Warrener, at: tnq.ca/parallel
18 minutes | Oct 25, 2021
Episode 10 | Madhur Anand
"Writing is something that I really come at as a writer. And I think, like many writers, we all bring our, our lenses to what we write. Science--now I'm realizing more and more—it's a language, it's an entire language. Which, of course, has a culture associated with it as all languages do. And I bring that language and culture to my writing"In this episode, Madhur Anand challenges the divide between art and science and proposes new structures for writing, informed by the natural world. She discusses: Her Governor-General-Award-Winning memoirThis Red Line Goes Straight to Your Heart and taking on the voice of her own parents (1:06) The turbulent history of Partition and how it influenced her family history and also the structure and style of the memoir (6:29) Telling many stories at once—“Aapbeeti or jag beeti?” My story or the story of the world? (7:50) Using constraints in both scientific inquiry and writing (11:05) Helping students move beyond superficial editing to actually re-vision their drafts (12:40) How both studying science and reading poetry can increase our empathy (15:47) Guest bio:Dr. MadhurAnandis the author of the experimental memoirThis Red Line Goes Straight to Your Heart, the poetry collection A New Index for Predicting Catastrophes, and several other literary works published in national and international literary magazines. She is a professor of ecology and sustainability at the University of Guelph, where she was appointed the inaugural Director of the Guelph Institute for Environmental Research.About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. The music you heard in this episode was composed by Amadeo Ventura. You can hear more of his music at amadeoventura.weebly.com.Visit TNQ.ca to access more of Madhur Anand’swriting and teaching tips, including web extras about accessibility in CanLit andher tips for teaching online. If you like our podcast, please leave a review—it really helps other listeners find our show! Thank you!
21 minutes | Sep 27, 2021
Episode 9 | Derek Newman-Stille
"I talk about speculative fiction in particular, as theory given characters and taken form. And so, rather than it just being like a theoretic concept out there somewhere, it becomes this very specific—here's a character that embodies this theory. Here's a world that embodies this theory. And then we play it out."In this episode, Derek Newman-Stille discusses breaking down the classroom hierarchy, disrupting fairy tales, and the need for Disability Arts. They discuss: Getting “a-ha!” moments through arts-based research, and sharing research insights in the public sphere (0:58) Moving past CanLit’s attachment to realism and creating a community for speculative writing through Speculating Canada, a digital humanities hub (4:55) Their Frankenstein fiction anthology We Shall Be Monsters and examining ways we project horror in an ableist society. (6:30) Helping students develop speculative worlds using the diversity of nature on planet Earth—including Birds of Paradise! (9:14)  Creating contemporary fairytales that make space for marginalized identities in their collection Whispers Between Fairies (13:00) Recognizing Disability Arts as part of creating a disability community and increasing accessibility (18:08) Guest Bio:Derek Newman-Stille is a PhD student at the Frost Centre for Canadian Studies at Trent University. Derek is a Queer, Nonbinary, Disabled activist, artist, author, and editor. They edited the two collections Over the Rainbow: Folk and Fairy Tales from the Margins (Exile) and We Shall Be Monsters (Renaissance Press) and they have a story in the all disabled collection Nothing Without Us (Renaissance Press). Their art has been featured in Lackington's Magazine and Postscripts to Darkness. Derek runs the 9 time Aurora Award winning digital humanities site Speculating Canada and the site Dis(Abled) Embodiment. Derek researches Canadian Urban Dark Fantasy and the use of the symbol of the monster for exploring the representation of disability issues. Derek is an artist of many mediums and their visual arts can be seen at www.dereknewmanstille.ca.About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more free writing and teaching tips at: tnq.ca/parallel
18 minutes | Aug 30, 2021
Episode 8 | Chelene Knight
“When I think about teachers as gatekeepers, I think deeply about privilege and what our access to information and knowledge looks like. I recall a lot of the opportunities that have been offered to me came from a teacher just paying attention. And so when I think of gatekeeping at that smaller scale, it's also the teacher needing to pay attention to that and to open the door and say, 'Hey, you. You can come into the space. It's totally fine.’” In this episode, Chelene Knight discusses creating new containers for learning and how she’s shaping CanLit as a writer, editor, and agent.  0:41 | Her focus on creative sustainability through industry transparency, wellness and care, and process-building at The Forever Writers Club through Breathing Space Creative. 4:33 | Writing in hybrid forms and the development of Dear Current Occupant 8:00 | Becoming a literary agent and creating ethical boundaries 11:35 | Her exercise “Be the Observer” and how it can help overcome writer’s block 13:22 | Bringing the community of Hogan’s Alley to life on the page in her forthcoming novel Junie Guest Bio:  Chelene Knight is the author of Braided Skin and the memoir Dear Current Occupant, winner of the 2018 Vancouver Book Award, and long-listed for the George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature. Her essays have appeared in the Globe and Mail, the Walrus, and the Toronto Star. Her work is anthologized in Making Room, Love Me True, Sustenance, The Summer Book, and Black Writers Matter, winner of the 2020 Saskatchewan Book Award. Knight was the previous managing editor at Room magazine and the previous festival director for the Growing Room Festival in Vancouver. She is now CEO of her own literary studio, Breathing Space Creative and she works as an associate literary agent with Transatlantic Agency. Chelene teaches part-time at the University of Toronto.  About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more free writing and teaching tips at: tnq.ca/parallel
17 minutes | Jul 26, 2021
Episode 7 | Erin Bow
“My own background in physics has taught me wonder. As a poet, we deal mostly in metaphors and a metaphor says that this is that - that's what equations do too. Equations say that mass is energy. Just being able to throw yourself at the universe and find out everything you can is a great background for a scientist or for an artist.” In this episode, Erin Bow discusses the lightning bolt of inspiration and balancing writing, teaching and science translation. She discusses: 1:57 | Her advice for young writers 2:56 | Writing the books that “young me really needed to read,” including her Governor General’s Award-winning book Stand on the Sky 7:06 | Drawing lines about which stories to write 8:56 | Getting kids on their feet during school visits 12:51 | How studying physics has enriched her artistic practice…and the mystery of where gold comes from Guest Bio:  Erin Bow is an award-winning poet and novelist, whose honors include the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award, the CBC Literary Award for poetry, and a Governor General’s Award. Though trained as a physicist, Erin Bow is now a poet and children’s writer, working out of her garden shed in Kitchener, Ontario.  She is the author of five novels for young adults: The fantasies Plain Kate and Sorrow’s Knot, and the genre-bending duology, The Scorpion Rules, and The Swan Riders, and Stand on the Sky. All her books will make you cry on the bus. About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.   Access more free writing and teaching tips from Erin Bow at: tnq.ca/parallel
16 minutes | Jun 28, 2021
Episode 6 | Kathy Friedman
“Many people have lifted me up and have given me a helping hand in my career and I wouldn't be here without them. And so the more I can do to pull up the next generation, the more I will do. And that's what teaching is all about.” In this episode, Kathy Friedman discusses offering students choice and control in the classroom. She discusses: 0:27 | Building Mad literary arts and Inkwell Workshops 3:09 | Being trauma-informed and making participants feel seen 5:57 | Her forthcoming collection All the Shining People and exploring Jewish South African identity during and after apartheid 11:18 | Teaching with objects and the importance of brainstorming 13:46 | The power of bringing your own vulnerabilities into the classroom Guest Bio:  Kathy Friedman’s writing has appeared in literary magazines including The New Quarterly, PRISM international, Grain, Geist, Room, Canadian Notes & Queries, Humber Literary Review, and This Magazine. She has been a finalist for the Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers, runner-up for the Peter Hinchcliffe Fiction Award and PRISM International’s short fiction contest, and was nominated by PRISM for the Journey Prize. Kathy has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph and a BFA in Creative Writing from UBC. She teaches creative writing in the University of Guelph’s department of Open Learning.  Kathy is the co-founder and artistic director of InkWell Workshops, which delivers free creative writing workshops to people with mental health and addiction issues. She is the publisher of four literary anthologies with their in-house imprint, InkWell Books. About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.   Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.   Access more free writing and teaching tips from Kathy Friedman at: tnq.ca/parallel
18 minutes | May 31, 2021
Episode 5 | Francine Cunningham
“For me, poetry is really where my heart lives. And the reason why these poems are maybe such short emotional bursts is because that's how my heart functions. I definitely know I'm not a super technical poet. I'm not a structural form poet. My poetry is just me heart-speaking. And that's it. And that's all I want it to be. And that's all it needs to be.” In this episode, Francine Cunningham discusses giving people permission to write their own stories. She discusses: 0:32 | Working with youth who feel disconnected from their own culture 2:21 | Giving adults permission to be creative 4:55 | The development of her award-winning collection On/Me and what it’s like to write an encyclopedia of the self 8:12 | Why it’s important to keep some stories for yourself and your community 9:48 | What we notice when we stop constantly trying to be productive 12:27 | Her exercise “Words Matter” and the five essential questions to ask yourself when you’re writing Guest Bio:  Francine Cunningham is an award-winning Indigenous writer, artist, and educator originally from Calgary, AB but who currently resides in Vancouver, BC. She is a graduate of the UBC Creative Writing MFA program and a recent winner of The Indigenous Voices Award in the 2019 Unpublished Prose Category and of The Hnatyshyn Foundation’s REVEAL Indigenous Art Award.  Her fiction has appeared in Grain Magazine as the 2018 Short Prose Award winner, on The Malahat Review’s Far Horizon’s Prose shortlist, Joyland Magazine, The Puritan Magazine, and more. Her debut book of poetry is titled On/Me (Caitlin Press). About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly Magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada.   Access more free writing and teaching tips from Francine Cunningham at: tnq.ca/parallel
18 minutes | Apr 26, 2021
Episode 4 | Farzana Doctor
“If you're going to walk into any room and do any kind of presentation, you just want to assume that people are really happy that you're there. You bring more of yourself. You're less focused on your content and more interested in who's in the room and what they might need. You go from rigid to fluid.”  Farzana Doctor discusses how her career as a psychotherapist informs her writing and teaching practices. In this episode, she discusses: 02:14 | The lightning bolt of inspiration that helped her revise her novel All Inclusive 03:53 | Being respectful when writing about real-world events, such as the Air India bombing 06:40 | How her activism sparked her most recent novel, Seven, a multi-generational story dealing with the impact of khatna in the Dawoodi Bohra community 08:54 | Self-care for writers both while creating new work and while promoting it 13:05 | Techniques for silencing your inner critic 15:20 | Facilitating constructive peer feedback Guest Bio: Farzana Doctor is a writer, activist, and psychotherapist. From 2009-18, she curated the Brockton Writers Series and has been a volunteer with The Writers’ Union of Canada and the Writers’ Trust. She currently volunteers with WeSpeakOut, a global group that is working to ban female genital cutting in her Dawoodi Bohra community. She has been writing all of her life but it became a more regular practice around 2000, when she began writing her first novel, Stealing Nasreen, which was published by Inanna in 2007.  Her second novel, Six Metres of Pavement, won a 2012 Lambda Literary Award and was short-listed for the 2012 Toronto Book Award. In 2017 it was voted the One Book One Brampton 2017 winner. Her third novel, All Inclusive was a Kobo 2015 and National Post Best Book of the Year. She's just completed a novel, Seven (August 2020, Dundurn), and a poetry collection, You Still Look the Same. She is currently at work on a YA novel.   About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.   Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more free writing and teaching tips from Farzana Doctor at: tnq.ca/parallel
18 minutes | Mar 29, 2021
Episode 3 | Dorothy Palmer
“I think the idea of an emerging writer only being someone barely emerged from puberty is a problem. Some 25% of Canada is over 65. Where are our first time senior writers? The only senior writers we see are people who have had a long career. Who started in their thirties. And some of that is fueled by capitalism. I've had agents look me in the eye and say, ‘You know, you're a fabulous writer. You're as good a writer as anyone I represent, but I'm just not going to take you on because I don't think you have five books left in you.’” Dorothy Ellen Palmer shares her thoughts on the opportunities that the pandemic presents for advancing disability justice. In this episode, she discusses: 00:01 | Ageism in Can Lit 03:35 | Sensitivity readings…and how to kill someone with a walker 05:05 | Ethical representation of disabled characters by abled authors 10:27 | What inspired her books When Fenlon Falls and Falling for Myself: A Memoir 13:48 | How to teach character development with her exercise “Pass the Pudding” 15:35 | The importance of combining activism with an artistic practice   Guest Bio: Dorothy Ellen Palmer is a disabled senior writer, accessibility consultant, and retired high school drama teacher and union activist. For three decades, she worked in three provinces as a high school English/Drama teacher, teaching on a Mennonite Colony, a four-room schoolhouse, an adult learning centre attached to a prison and a highly diverse new high school in Pickering. Elected to her union executive each year for fifteen years, she created staff and student workshops to fight bullying, racism, sexism, sexual harassment and homophobia. Dorothy sits on the Accessibility Advisory Board of the Festival of Literary Diversity (FOLD) and is an executive board member for the Canadian Creative Writers and Writing Programs (CCWWP) where she writes a monthly column on disability in CanLit for the newsletter. Her work has appeared in: REFUSE, Wordgathering, Alt-Minds, All Lit Up, Don't Talk to Me About Love, Little Fiction Big Truths, 49th Shelf and Open Book. Her first novel, When Fenelon Falls, features a disabled teen protagonist in the Woodstock-Moonwalk summer of 1969. She lives in Burlington, Ontario, and can always be found tweeting @depalm.   About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.   Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more writing and teaching tips from Dorothy Ellen Palmer at: tnq.ca/parallel
19 minutes | Feb 22, 2021
Episode 2 | Paul Vermeersch
“When someone commits to being an artist of any kind, they are also committing to a lifelong process of learning. I want to always be a student of the craft of writing, even when my job is to teach it. As Mr. Miyagi told Daniel in The Karate Kid, someone always knows more karate. And I want to learn all the karate I can when it comes to writing poetry.” Paul Vermeersch discusses how, to become an artist, you must commit to a life-long process of learning. In this episode, he discusses: 00:40 | His recent collection Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995-2020 02:08 | The optimism of the atomic age and our current fixation with dystopia 08:26 | Helping students expand their work past preconceived boundaries of poetic form 11:44 | Ekphrastic poetry and its pitfalls 13:38 | Teaching a course on Self-Publishing at Sheridan College  17:10 | How literature can help shape the future Guest Bio: Paul Vermeersch is a poet, multimedia artist, creative writing professor, and literary editor. He is the author of several poetry collections, including the Trillium–award nominated The Reinvention of the Human Hand and, most recently, Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995-2020. He holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Guelph for which he received the Governor General's Gold Medal. He teaches in the Creative Writing & Publishing program at Sheridan College and is the founding editor of Buckrider Books, an imprint of Wolsak and Wynn Publishers Ltd. He lives in Toronto.   About the Podcast: Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach. Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development. Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft.   Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more writing and teaching tips from Paul Vermeerch at: tnq.ca/parallel  
13 minutes | Jan 25, 2021
Episode 1 | Lamees Al Ethari
“Am I doing enough? I mean, with the new generations of students, everybody's plugged in and knowledge is out there. So in the classroom, what are they actually coming to learn from me? What am I giving them?” Lamees Al Ethari questions how to know when you’re doing enough as a teacher and a writer. In this episode, she discusses: 00:30 | Developing diverse course reading lists and the impact of representation on students  02:39 | The development of her memoir Waiting for the Rain: An Iraqi Memoir and her poetry collection, From the Wounded Banks of the Tigris 05:13 | Writing about the trauma of war and the challenges of an audience that has no experience with it  08:26 | Using constraints in group work and preparing students to give feedback 09:20 | Her experience working on The X Page: A Storytelling Workshop and helping writers find their voice in a second language 10:43 | How who she writes for has shifted over time Guest Bio: Lamees Al Ethari holds a PhD in English Language and Literature from the University of Waterloo, where she has been teaching creative and academic writing since 2015. She has published a collection of poems titled From the Wounded Banks of the Tigris (2018) and, more recently, a memoir titled Waiting for the Rain: An Iraqi Memoir (2019). Her poems have appeared in About Place Journal, The New Quarterly, The Malpais Review, and the anthology Al Mutanabbi Street Starts Here. She is a Nonfiction Editor with The New Quarterly and a co-coordinator for The X Page: A Storytelling Workshop for Refugee and Immigrant Women.About the Podcast:Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach.Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development.Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Access more writing and teaching tips from Lamees Al Ethari at: tnq.ca/episode-1-lamees-al-ethari
1 minutes | Dec 21, 2020
Introducing Parallel Careers
About the Podcast:Parallel Careers is a monthly podcast about the dual lives of writers who teach.Few writers make their living from publication alone; many fill the gaps with teaching in both academic and community settings. Much of the work is precarious, and there are few opportunities for professional development.Parallel Careers features writers with diverse practices and points of view—writers who are at the top of their game in both craft and pedagogy. Tune in to hear the big ideas and practical tips they take into their classrooms. Take their insights into your own class or craft. Credits: Parallel Careers is produced by Claire Tacon, in partnership with The New Quarterly magazine. Erin MacIndoe Sproule is our Technical Producer and Story Editor. Music composed by Amadeo Ventura. Financial and in-kind support provided by the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, St. Jerome’s University, and the Government of Canada. Learn more about the podcast at:tnq.ca/parallel
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