Sgt Johanie Maheu, Rideau Hall 漏 OSGG, 2019
March 19, 2019
Aritha van Herk invested into Order of Canada
Aritha van Herk isn鈥檛 quite sure why she was invested into the Order of Canada. The Governor General鈥檚 letter that came in the mail last year didn鈥檛 spell out why the long-time professor in the Faculty of Arts was being recognized for making 鈥渆xtraordinary contributions鈥 to Canada.
A peek at van Herk鈥檚 extraordinary contributions include award-winning novels about a fiery female pig farmer and a randy underwear saleswoman (Judith听补苍诲听No Fixed Address), celebrating Alberta鈥檚 history in an award-winning work of non-fiction (Mavericks: an Incorrigible History of Alberta)聽and hundreds of essays, chapters and other works from feminism to ficto-criticism, a genre she is credited with inventing.聽
鈥淚 think I am getting the Order for being eclectic,鈥 says van Herk, who is both humbled and honoured by the recognition. 鈥淚 have always been interested in conveying ideas to many different people. It must be the pedagogue in me or more likely because I think that intelligent ideas should be shared. Canada is about diversity. And a writer has to be diverse.鈥
Her current list of projects includes a travel piece, a creative biography about Canadian writer Robert Kroetsch and a novel with a deliciously 鈥渞eprehensible鈥 character. 鈥淚 work on different projects because when you get to a difficult stage on one it鈥檚 good to put it aside and let it marinate. I focus on revising another, get a draft of that done, and then return to the first, refreshed.鈥
Van Herk鈥檚 interests beyond the page are equally diverse. She lends her time to a number of committees and boards across the country and is a vocal advocate for causes including the West, women and Canadian winters. 鈥淭here is no bad weather, just bad clothing,鈥 she says.聽
She鈥檚 fearless, says PhD student Jane Chamberlain, who was TA for van Herk鈥檚 creative writing class for MBA students. 鈥淎 discussion dipped in and out of issues around mortality and she said 鈥楲et鈥檚 stop tip-toeing around. Let鈥檚 talk about death.鈥欌 The MBA students valued the 鈥渨renching discussion鈥 as much as learning about writing, says Chamberlain.
鈥淗er novels were the first to open my eyes to the fact that works of fiction could be set in Western Canada and could feature recognizable people, places, and ideas,鈥 says another of her PhD students, Dawn Bryan, who describes her supervisor as 鈥渕eticulous, curious and generous.鈥
Van Herk was in Ottawa last week to be invested into the Order of Canada. It鈥檚 the latest in a decades鈥-long list of awards and accolades, including Member of the Alberta Order of Excellence, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and of the Glenbow Museum, and recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Letters from Athabasca University. 聽
As for writing, van Herk has more topics she wants to tackle including guilt, rage, privacy and place. 鈥淚 have so many ideas. If only I have 50 more years to get them down,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think if you are going to be a writer who has any effect in Canada, you have to be flexible. If you sit in a little corner and say 鈥業 am a poet,鈥 you will have a very dull life and I think you will reach very few people.鈥
Cumming School's Tom Feasby invested into Order of Canada
At the same ceremony,聽Dr. Thomas Feasby, MD, was invested as a Member of the Order of Canada. His citation reads: "Tom Feasby has brought visionary leadership to clinical and academic medicine in western Canada. Professor of neurology and a former senior leader at the universities of Calgary and Alberta, he was influential in building and expanding their medical programs and areas of expertise. Notably, the 草莓污视频导航 has risen to the national forefront of clinical neuroscience and stroke research thanks to his passion and dedication. A renowned mentor, he has nurtured the careers of many leading clinician-scientists."
Feasby was appointed to the Order in December 2017.