Born and raised in the United States, Robin Blaser (1925-2009) was part of the Berkeley Renaissance of the 1950s and the San Francisco poetry communities of the 1960s. In 1966 he took up a position at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, where he taught for the next 20 years. He became a Canadian citizen in 1972. Blaser was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2005 and in 2008 received the Griffin Poetry Prize for his major work, The Holy Forest.
Author: Karis Shearer
Sheila Watson
Sheila Watson (nee Doherty) (1939-1998) was a writer, teacher, and English professor best known for her novel The Double Hook (1959), which has been called the first modernist Canadian novel. Watson also published Deep Hollow Creek (1992), which was nominated for the Governor General’s Award. She wrote several collections of short stories and co-founded the literary magazine White Pelican.
Angela Bowering
Angela Bowering was born in Campbell River, B.C. and raised partly on Sointula. She is the author of Figures Cut in Sacred Ground: Illuminati in The Double Hook (NeWest, 1988) and co-author of the experimental novella Piccolo Mondo with George Bowering, Michael Matthews, and David Bromige.
Judith Copithorne
Judith Copithorne (1939– ) was born and raised in Vancouver. Well known as a leading concrete poet and intermedia artist, Copithorne was a member of the “downtown poets” community in the 1960s and 70s, and was involved in such alternative art venues as Intermedia, Sound Gallery, and Motion Studio. She published in early issues of Ganglia and blewointment and has had work included in both gallery exhibitions and such print publications as New Direction in Canadian Poetry (1971), The Cosmic Chef (1970), Four Parts Sand (1972), THE LAST BLEWOINTMENT ANTHOLOGY VOLUME 1 (1985), The Last Vispo Anthology: Visual Poetry, 1998–2008 (2012), and Judith: An Anthology of Women Making Visual Poetry (2021). Most recently, Copithorne’s Another Order: Selected Works edited by Eric Schmaltz was published by Talonbooks.
Daphne Marlatt
Daphne Marlatt (1942-) grew up in Penang, Malaysia before immigrating to Canada in the 1950s. While studying at UBC in the 1960s, Marlatt was one of the editors during the second-phase of TISH. Marlatt has written over twenty collections of poetry and prose including Steveston (1974), The Given (2008), and Reading Sveva (2016). In 2006 she received the Order of Canada. Marlatt lives in Vancouver.