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Olive Senior

Jamaican author

Olive Marjorie Senior (born 23 December 1941) is a Jamaican poet, novelist, short story and non-fiction writer based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She was awarded the Musgrave Gold Medal in 2005 by the Ins*ute of Jamaica for her contributions to literature.

Contents

  • 1 Life and career
  • 2 Literary works
  • 3 Translations
  • 4 Selected awards and honours
  • 5 Selected bibliography
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Life and career

Born in rural Jamaica in Trelawny, *pit Country, Olive Senior was the seventh of 10 children. Senior attended Montego Bay High School for Girls. At nineteen, she joined the staff of the Jamaica Gleaner in Kingston and later worked with the Jamaica Information Service. Senior later won a scholarship to study journalism at the Thomson Foundation in Cardiff, Wales and as a Commonwealth scholar attended Carleton University School of Journalism in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

While at university she began writing fiction and poetry. On her return to Jamaica, she worked as a freelancer in public relations, publishing, and speech writing before joining the Ins*ute of Social and Economic Research at the University of the West Indies, where she edited the journal Social and Economic Studies (1972–77). In 1982 she joined the Ins*ute of Jamaica as editor of the Jamaica Journal.

In 1987 Senior won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for her first collection of stories. After Hurricane Gilbert hit Jamaica in 1988, Senior moved to Europe, where she lived in Portugal, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, before settling in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in the early 1990s.

In 2019 she was awarded the Matt Cohen Award by the Writers' Trust of Canada in honour of her career as a writer.

Literary works

Senior has published four collections of poems: Talking of Trees (1985), Gardening in the Tropics (1994), Over the Roofs of the World (2005) and Shell (2007). Her short story collection Summer Lightning (1986) won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize; it was followed by Arrival of the Snake Woman (also includes "The Two Grandmothers" which is one of her best short stories) (1989, 2009) and Discerner of Hearts (1995). Her most recent collection of stories, The Pain Tree (2015), was the overall winner of the 2016 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, having won the fiction category.

Her first novel, Dancing Lessons (Cormorant Books, 2011), was shortlisted for the 2012 Commonwealth Book Prize in the Canada region.

Her non-fiction works include The Message Is Change (1972), about Michael Manley's first election victory; A-Z of Jamaican Heritage (1984, expanded and republished as Encyclopedia of Jamaican Heritage in 2004); and Working Miracles: Women's Lives in the English-Speaking Caribbean (1991).

Senior's most recent non-fiction book, Dying To Better Themselves: West Indians and the Building of the Panama C*, was published in September 2014 – 100 years after the opening of the Panama C*, 15 August 1914. On 1 April 2015 the book was shortlisted for the 2015 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, winning the non-fiction category.

An extended critical evaluation of Senior's work can be found in Olive Senior by Denise deCaires Narain (2011), published by Northcote House Publishers (UK) in collaboration with the British Council as part of the Writers and Their Work series.

Senior's work often addresses questions of Caribbean iden*y in terms of gender and ethnicity. She has said: "I've had to deal with race because of who I am and how I look. In that process, I've had to determine who I am. I do not think you can be all things to all people. As part of that process, I decided I was a Jamaican. I represent many different races and I'm not rejecting any of them to please anybody. I'm just who I am and you have to accept me or not."

Her work has been adapted as drama and broadcast by the BBC and CBC, and she also wrote the radio play Window for the CBC. Her writing features in a wide range of anthologies including Her True-True Name (eds Elizabeth Wilson and Pamela Mordecai, 1989), Daughters of Africa (ed. Margaret Busby, 1992), The Heinemann Book of Caribbean Poetry (eds Ian McDonald and Stewart Brown, 1992), Concert of Voices: An Anthology of World Writing in English (ed. Victor J. Ramraj, 1994), The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror Tenth Annual Collection (eds Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, 1997), The Wadsworth Anthology of Poetry (ed. Jay Parini, 2005), Best Poems on the Underground (eds Gerard Benson, Judith Chernaik and Cicely Herbert, 2010), So Much Things to Say: 100 Calabash Poets (2010), and numerous others.

Her work is taught in schools and universities internationally, with Summer Lightning and Gardening in the Tropics in particular being used as educational textbooks.

Translations

Recent translations include: ZigZag, translated into French by Christine Raguet, Geneva: Zoe, 2010; Eclairs de chaleur, translated into French by Christine Raguet, Geneva: Zoe, 2011, Depuis la Terr*e et autres nouvelles (translated into French by Marie-Annick Montout), special edition, Mauritius: L'Atelier d'écriture, 2011; Zomerweerlicht (trans. Marie Luyten), Netherlands: Ambo/Novib, 1991; Das Erscheinen der Schlangenfrau (trans: Wolfgang Binder) Germany: Dipa/Verlag, 1996, and Unionsverlag, 2003; a Book Club Selection, The Berne Declaration, Switzerland, 1996.

A bilingual (English and French) book of Senior's poetry, Un Pipirit M'a Dit/A Little Bird Told Me was released in 2014.

Gardening in the tropics, translated into Arabic by Mamoun Zaidei, published by NCCAL. KWAIT.2017

Selected awards and honours

  • 1987: Commonwealth Writers' Prize, for Summer Lightning and Other Stories
  • 1988: Silver Musgrave Medal
  • 1994: Hawthornden Fellow, Scotland
  • 1994–95: Dana Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing and International Education, St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY
  • 1995: F.G. Bressani Literary Prize for Gardening in the Tropics
  • 2003: Norman Washington Manley Foundation Award for Excellence (preservation of cultural heritage – Jamaica)
  • 2004: Gold Musgrave Medal of the Ins*ute of Jamaica
  • 2005: Humanities Scholar, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill, Barbados
  • 2005: Over the Roofs of the World shortlisted for the Governor-General's Literary Award for Poetry
  • 2005: Runner-up for the Casa de las Américas Prize
  • 2006: Shell shortlisted for the Pat Lowther Award
  • 2006: Ontario Arts Council and Canada Council works-in-progress grants
  • 2011: Dancing Lessons shortlisted for the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, the Commonwealth Book Prize
  • 2011: Isabel Sissons Canadian Children's Story Award
  • 2015: OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, winner of non-fiction category
  • 2016: OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, winner of fiction category and overall winner

Selected bibliography

Poetry

  • Talking of Trees, Calabash, 1986.
  • Gardening in the Tropics, McClelland & Stewart, 1994.
  • Over the Roofs of the World, Insomniac Press, 2005
  • Shell, Insomniac Press, 2007

Short stories

  • Summer Lightning and Other Stories, Longman, 1986. ISBN:978-0582786271
  • Arrival of the Snake-Woman, Longman, 1989. (Includes The Two Grandmothers). ISBN:978-0582031708
  • Discerner of Hearts, McClelland & Stewart, 1995. ISBN:978-0771080548
  • The Pain Tree, Cormorant, 2015. ISBN:978-1-77086-434-4

Novels

  • Dancing Lessons, Cormorant Books, 2011. ISBN:978-1770860476

Children's literature

  • Birthday Suit, Annick Press, 2012
  • Anna Carries Water, Tradewind, 2013
  • Boonoonoonous Hair, Tradewind, 2019

Non-fiction

  • The Message Is Change: A Perspective on the 1972 General Elections, Kingston Publishers, 1972.
  • Pop Story Gi Mi (four booklets on Jamaican heritage for schools), Ministry of Education (Kingston, Jamaica), 1973.
  • A-Z of Jamaican Heritage, Heinemann and Gleaner Company Ltd, 1984.
  • Working Miracles: Women's Lives in the English-Speaking Caribbean, Indiana University Press, 1991.
  • Encyclopedia of Jamaican Heritage, Twin Guinep, 2004.
  • Dying To Better Themselves: West Indians and the Building of the Panama C*, University of the West Indies Press, 2014. ISBN:978-9766404574

References

    Interviews in the Jamaica Gleaner:

    • Laura Tanna, "One-on-one with Olive Senior (Pt. II)", 31 October 2004.
    • Laura Tanna, "One-on-one with Olive Senior (Part 3)", 7 November 2004.

    External links

    • Olive Senior's website.
    • Video of Olive Senior Reading and Conversation on Monday, Feb. 8, 2016 in the Digital Library of the Caribbean
    • "NAW Interview with Olive Senior", New Asian Writing, 15 September 2014.
    • "Olive Senior: 'Should Literature Be Political?'" Keynote speech delivered by Olive Senior at the Edinburgh World Writers' Conference: Trinidad.
    • A brief selection of poems by Olive Senior, in audio format and read by her, is available via the website of The Poetry Archive.