Poets from the Great North of yesterday and today have been published in the book Poésie franco-ouestrienne 1974-2024, a work which was presented to the public on Thursday in Yellowknife, in the Northwest Territories.
A text from Julie Plourde
Friday, it will be the turn of the public in Whitehorse, Yukon, to discover this book edited by the Franco-Manitoban poet Roger Léveillé and published by Éditions du Blé.
The book Poésie franco-ouestrienne brings together, for the first time, contemporary French-speaking poetry from the West and Northwest: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Nunavut, Saskatchewan, Northwest Territories, Yukon. Nine poets from the Canadian North were published in this work. Photo: -/Julie Plourde
It was the latter who approached Amber O’Reillya multidisciplinary artist, slammer and poet from Yellowknifeso that she can meet poets from the three northern territories. mrs O’Reilly said it was not a simple task.
It’s really a bit of a junk research methodology.
she explains.
I did a lot of research to meet these voices, since they are artists who have worked on the margins, who have not necessarily published collections through traditional publishing channels.
The book features the works of 71 poets from the West and North. In the Northwest Territories, the poems of nine authors were chosen for this book, such as, for example, the late René Fumoleau, Denis Lord, Apollo Jenna and Mélanie Genest.
Batiste Foisy is also among them. He read two of his creations at the launch Thursday at the Visitor Center Yellowknife.
I started writing poetry when I was maybe 17
he says. It’s been almost 25 years
.
Batiste Foisy has lived in Yellowknife for 20 years. He started writing poetry when he was 17. He writes most of the time for stage performance. Photo: -/Julie Plourde
These are things that I wrote a long time ago, that I will have to take responsibility for
he said, laughing.
I generally write to read on stage, for stage performance. […] My work will use a lot of figures of speech that are rhythmic, rhyme being the one that people know best
he said.
Batiste Foisy delivered two poems during the launch in Yellowknife of the book Poésie franco-ouestrienne 1974-2024. Photo: -/Julie Plourde
But I don’t do a lot of rhymes, I do more other types of rhythmic figures of speech
explains Batiste Foisy, a few minutes before delivering his first poem in front of the twenty people gathered for this launch.
More freedom
The collection does not necessarily offer works anchored in Nordic geography, but the North still leaves its mark, according to Amber O’Reilly.
We wanted to dig a little deeper
she said. But by the very fact that the people who wrote them passed through here, I find that it brings a certain color to the writing, a certain marginality, a daring perhaps to try new things, to experiment at the level of style.
Around twenty people attended the launch organized in collaboration with the Association franco-culturelle de Yellowknife at the Yellowknife Welcome Centre. Photo: -/Julie Plourde
Mme O’Reilly believes that the absence of a publishing house in the North for many years probably gave authors more freedom.
We weren’t necessarily confined to predefined styles that pleased publishers. Everything has to be built here
she adds.
Discover yourself through writing
Since 2017, a small publishing house has been established in Yellowknife. Les Éditions Présence francophone, under the direction of Isidore Guy Makaya. The latter also saw some of his poems published in the anthology of Franco-Western poetry.
The thing that I find that’s quite interesting about writing is like a kind of psychoanalysis, it’s like a kind of cure for boredom. Maybe if I hadn’t been a writer, maybe I would have gone crazy
says the one who is mainly inspired by his dreams.
Isidore Guy Makaya presented three poems at the launch of the book Poésie franco-ouestrienne 1974-2024. Photo: -/Julie Plourde
I like to write and I write according to inspiration […] It’s really authentic. These are dreams at night
he said.
Mr. Makaya believes that writing allows him to discover himself.
It’s part of life, a process. I discover myself every day […]it’s like a commitment that I made in my life to seek to know myself.
The calm of the North also helps him find inspiration.
The fact that I live all the time in calm, perhaps in solitude, perhaps allows my mind to create
he concludes.
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