During the Fall 2024 semester, McGillâs Department of English welcomes Ann-Marie MacDonald as the 2024-2025 Richler Writer in Residence. MacDonaldâs literary works include ten plays and four novels, touching on feminist, queer, and decolonial themes.ÌęÂ
During her residency, MacDonald will be participating in two events: a conversation on historical fiction with former Richler Writer-in-Residence and McGill alum Heather OâNeill, on October 30th, and a talk with Dr. Neta Gordon from Brock University on her SSHRC funded interdisciplinary project of literary geography and the . During her time at McGill, MacDonald will be working on two new plays, one of which is a stage adaptation of Jane Austenâs Pride and Prejudice for the Stratford Festival.ÌęÂ
MacDonald will hold office hours for students in Arts-310 on October 21, 25 and November 29, from 9:30AM to 12:30PM. Students are welcome to bring any material that is readable within 20 minutes. A sign up sheet for appointments with MacDonald is available in Arts 310. Â
On the Outside, Looking In: The Journey of a Writer Â
Over the last four decades, MacDonald has been engaging in various forms of art and expression; from acting to playwriting to novel writing, to broadcasting, she has engaged a vast array of audiences across mediums and subjects.Ìę
Due to her fatherâs work in the Canadian Air Force, MacDonald moved around a lot in her childhood. Born in Germany, MacDonaldâs upbringing was shaped by her parentsâ own history: her father, who could trace his familyâs lineage back to the Highland Clearances and her mother, the child of Lebanese immigrants, both hailed from Cape Breton Island.ÌęÂ
Growing up, MacDonald learned traditional Lebanese dancing as well as Highland dancing and was exposed to her familyâs memories, myths and repeated stories, which shaped her perspective as an artist. A sense of being different has followed her ever since.ÌęÂ
âMoving around a lot gave me the sense of belonging and not-belonging, of being ânormalâ and ânot normalâ,â she says. âAlways inside and outside at the same time, which when you think about it, is the perspective of the artist. A writer who is sufficiently âinsideâ to understand something and sufficiently âoutsideâ to always be observing.âÂ
The Period Novel and its Contemporary Dialogue Â
The period novel is a genre in which MacDonald has worked extensively in and serves as the main topic of her first event at McGill. Her latest novel, , published by Knopf Canada in 2022, is set on a remote estate straddling the border between England and Scotland in the late 1800s, and was written in the spirit of the Victorian novel (readers will recognize the world of the BrontĂ« sisters in Fayneâs pages.) Â
For MacDonald, Fayne is a book that couldnât have been written in any other moment than the 21st century.ÌęÂ
âI am interested in the idea of writing a period novel since it can only ever be written now,â says MacDonald. âWhat is it about something in a distant time period, in a historical setting, that enables you to speak to the present, to the contemporary moment?âÂ
âIn writing Fayne, I know that I am entering into an agreement with the reader,â says MacDonald. âThe tropes and conceits of the genre will be abundant and those are going to buoy the reader experience.âÂ
In honouring the tradition of the Victorian novel, MacDonald transports us to Fayne, the Bellâs lonely and isolated estate where the protagonist, Charlotte, who lives alone with her reclusive father on 12,000 acres of moorlands, has an insatiable thirst for knowledge and enjoys exploring the boglands of her fatherâs estate, learning about the old healing ways of the bog from the estateâs hired man Byrn.ÌęÂ
Storytelling Through ResearchÂ
Charlotteâs hunger for knowledge and her eventual discovery of science via her tutor reflects MacDonaldâs own fascination with the history of science in the late nineteenth century.ÌęÂ
âHistorical fiction offers an opportunity to create an immersive experience for the reader, because we are going to a faraway time and that means that you are already letting go of the present moment, the suspension of disbelief has begun,â says MacDonald. âWe are going to time-travel, we are going to taste, and smell, and feel what it was like then and there.âÂ
In creating Fayneâs universe, MacDonald undertook extensive research at the Osler Library of the History of Medicine at Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ”, as well as medical museums in London, Glasgow, and Edinburgh.ÌęÂ
âI was in my happy place reading old case studies, paging through catalogues of surgical implements, medical devices and diagnoses and prescriptions, as well as descriptions of female diseases and disorders, all of which stem from gynaecology,â says MacDonald.ÌęÂ
Fayneâs protagonist has been kept from the world by her father due in large part to a âmysterious conditionâ and her quest for knowledge upends her world, leading her father to arrange for her to be âcured.â Â
âThe woman is her uterus, that was the abiding principle,â adds MacDonald. Her book addresses this rise in gynaecology in the nineteenth century, the concept of female âhysteriaâ, and the clichĂ© of the rescuer. Â
Understanding and recreating that universe is crucial to the reading experience. Everything from Victorian medical terminologies to the shape and heaviness of the first gynaecological speculum, to the movers and thinkers that went on to shape and shift early 20th century thought, come together to immerse the reader in the protagonistâs universe.ÌęÂ
Crossing Borders: The Past in Dialogue with the PresentÂ
Borders are another topic that has always fascinated MacDonald. The Bellâs estate sits on the borderlands of England and Scotland, and Charlotteâs quest for knowledge crosses between the boundaries of ancestral knowledge and wisdom and the emergence of scientific thought.ÌęÂ
âBinaries have bedeviled me my entire career,â she says. âFayne is the ultimate challenge to any binary notion, whether it is of our body, our sexuality, our gender, or the nature of reality and our world itself, and the discovery of what is truly valuable.âÂ
In Fayne, MacDonald also engages with contemporary themes of ecocriticism and biodiversity. Charlotteâs fascination with the bogs on her fatherâs estate is an example of the past in dialogue with the present. Today, we now know that wetlands such as boglands, are an important carbon sink for the planet. Decades of human interventions on wetlands, such as the draining and burning of boglands for agricultural purposes, produces a large amount of CO2 emissions.Ìę
The act of âcuringâ Charlotte is mirrored in our âcuringâ of the planet, and MacDonald asks us to ponder, who needs to be âcuredâ? What is a âcureâ? And whatâs the difference between curing and healing?Â
In our own contemporary context, the commercial and cultural rise of self-care, debates on the reproductive rights of women, and the ever-looming threats of climate change, all point to a continued conversation on who and what needs to be cured.Ìę
MacDonaldâs works engage the reader in multiple conversations that crisscross the borders of history, art, and science, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of storytelling.Ìę
Readers can discover more about MacDonald's novels and plays by visiting her .Ìę