Professor Christopher Dewdney
Christopher Dewdney
was born in London, Ontario, and now lives in Toronto,
where he is a professor at York University.
Appointed to the position of Jack McClelland Writer in Residence at
the
University of Toronto for the year 2009,
he is the author of four books of
nonfiction as well as eleven books of poetry.
His father is the late Selwyn Dewdney, the renowned archaeologist,
author, and historian.
“Because of my father’s concerns, I grew up with a prodigious amount of
national history, natural history, and there was as much art around the
house as there was science.”
That his poems reflect both an interest in art and science is
borne out by the fact that his poetry can be found in either the poetry
or natural history sections of book stores and libraries.
“My poetry,” Chris says, “is warped out of science. I think I’m a
frustrated scientist in poetry and a frustrated poet in science. A lot
of poets have an anti-science bias, a vision of themselves as romantics
in a tower, but I don’t. I’m a naturalist, I believe that science and
nature are one, that science is a perceptual tool which allows us to
define nature more specifically. Science has to incorporate and
mythologize as it happens. All poetry deals with information, finally.”
A four-time
nominee for
the Governor General’s Award, Chris won first-prize in the CBC
Literary Competition for poetry. In 2005 his book,
Acquainted With The
Night: Excursions into the World After Dark was nominated for
both a
Governor General’s Award and The Charles Taylor Prize for literary
non-fiction, and was published in seven countries.
He was winner of the $10,000
2007 Harbourfront Festival Prize.
In 2008,
HarperCollins published his most recent non-fiction title,
Soul of The
World: Unlocking the Secrets of Time.
Chris authored
18 Miles: The Epic Drama of Our Atmosphere and Its Weather
(winner of the 2021 American
Meteorological Society’s Louis J. Battan Authors’ Award for science writing),
Last Flesh: Life in the Transhuman Era,
Children of the Outer Dark: The Poetry of Christopher
Dewdney,
Permugenesis: A Recombinant Text,
The Natural History,
The Radiant Inventory: Poems, and
Spring Trances in the Control Emerald Night and the Cenozoic
Asylum,
and provided the foreword for
The Garden at Night: Private Views of Public Edens.
In May 1994, McClelland and Stewart published
Demon Pond. Quill & Quire wrote that in
Demon Pond “Dewdney has undergone a transformation;
his poetry has taken on greater humanity and been touched by love, while
still in touch with the gods.”
In 1984 (together with William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Michael
Ondaatje and Tom Waits) he was featured in the internationally acclaimed
documentary
Poetry in Motion. He is an active figure in the North
American literary scene, and he has been published in Germany, England,
China, Spain, India as well as in the U.S. Recently he has appeared on
TVO’s Imprint, CBC’s Newsworld and CITY TV as well as CBC Radio’s
Morningside and The Arts Tonight.
Well known for his brilliance, wit and irreverence, Chris
is a sought-after speaker and reader in both Canada and the United
States.
Watch
Christopher Dewdney and
Soul of the World Trailer.
Listen to his interview on
BBC – Radio 4 – Excess Baggage – Graveyards and The World After
Dark.
Read
International Festival of Authors: Q & A with Christopher
Dewdney,
Author Christopher Dewdney looks at time with “Soul of the
World”, and
Christopher Dewdney in the Transhuman Era.