Eli Mandel
Eli Mandel | |
---|---|
Born | Elias Wolf Mandel December 3, 1922 Estevan, Saskatchewan, Canada |
Died | September 3, 1992 (aged 69) Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Notable awards | Governor General's Award |
Spouse | Miriam Mandel, Ann Hardy |
Children | Evie, Charles, Sara |
Eli Mandel (December 3, 1922 – September 3, 1992) was a Canadian poet, editor of many Canadian anthologies,[1] and literary academic.
Biography
[edit]Eli Mandel died in relative obscurity. A series of strokes had left him unable to write and, as a result, Mandel had receded from public view long before his death.
He was born Elias Wolf Mandel in Estevan, Saskatchewan, Canada to Russian Jewish parents who had emigrated from Ukraine, and grew up the Canadian prairies during the Great Depression.[2] After a job working for a pharmacist who, landed him a position serving in Canada's Medical Corps during World War II,[3] it has been said Mandel returned a forever emotionally distraught man who was destined to live the rest of his life without a sense of belonging. This helps explain the alienation that is illustrated throughout his writings.
He studied English at the University of Saskatchewan attaining a Master of Arts degree in 1950. He received a PhD from the University of Toronto in 1957.[4]
From 1953 to 1957, Mandel taught at the Royal Military College Saint-Jean.[5] Later, he taught English and creative writing at the University of Alberta, University of Victoria, University of Toronto, and York University.[2] He also taught Canadian studies at the University of Calgary.[6]
Besides his poetry, he wrote other critical works such as his 1969 essay on fellow poet Irving Layton.
He was married to his first wife, Miriam Mandel, for 18 years. The couple had two children, Evie and Charles. In 1967 they divorced and he married Ann Hardy. They had one child, Sara.[7]
Publishing poetry in the early 1950s,[8] Eli Mandel's first significant collection was entitled Minotaur poems (1954), and it appeared in the contact press anthology Trio (1954).
His poetry was published in 1954 in Trio, an anthology of poems by Mandel, Gael Turnbull, and Phyllis Webb published by Raymond Souster's Contact Press.[9]
His first book was Fuseli poems (1960).[8]
His works seem to have been deeply influenced by World War II, especially all the horrors of the Jewish concentration camps.[8] Despite the lack of direct references to the war until Stony Plain (1973), his work illustrates many grim and morbid images of despair, destruction written with a tone of inescapable pessimism.[8]
Mandel's style was contemplative and intellectual - "an ironic poet, rather than an angry one".[8] The lack of emotion heightens a hopeless outlook, a central feature in all of his writing.[8] His early works appear to have been written for "a scholarly rather than public audience" due to their literary complexity.[8] In his later work, however, starting with the poetry of Black and Secret Man (1964), Mandel simplifies the syntax and uses more colloquial language. While the thoughtful view remained as it was in his earlier work, a wittier tone replaced the previously somber one.
He was also a critic and editor, producing a monograph on his fellow-poet Irving Layton, and an anthology, Poetry62/Poésie62(1962), which he co-edited with Jean-Guy Pilon. Additionally, he championed many otherwise unnoticed newcomers of the 1950s such as Al Purdy, Milton Acorn, D. G. Jones and Alden Nowlan.
Critical reception
[edit]Eli Mandel's book, The Family Romance (1986), has been characterized by his quotations from essays on Hugh MacLennan and Northrop Frye’s The Great Code.[10] Both excerpts exemplify Mandel’s questioning of whatever is viewed as orthodoxy. He refuses to let pass what most people simply accept. In this essay collection, it has been recognized that the first piece, Auschwitz and Poetry, is the most powerful and significant and the last of this series of essays, The Border League: American ‘West’ and Canadian ‘Region’, seems to be the least successful.[11]
The compilation of Mandel’s work, The Other Harmony: the Collected Poetry of Eli Mandel, is a two volume collection, with the first including Mandel’s contributions to Trio, as well has his books Fuseli Poems, An Idiot Joy, Stony Plain, and others. It has been acknowledged as the more noteworthy of the two volumes in terms of its primary material.[12]
Eli Mandel's literary papers are held by the University of Manitoba Archives and Special Collections.[5]
Recognition
[edit]Mandel won the 1968 Governor General's Award for An Idiot Joy.[13]
In 1982 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.[13]
In 1989 he was made an honorary Doctor of Letters by York University.
Publications
[edit]Poetry
[edit]- 1954: Trio: First Poems by Gael Turnbull, Phyllis Webb, and Eli Mandel. Toronto: Contact Press, 1954.[9]
- 1960: Fuseli Poems
- Black and Secret Man. (Toronto: Ryerson, 1964)
- 1967: An Idiot Joy (Hurtig)
- Crusoe: Poems Selected and New (Toronto: Anansi, 1973)
- 1973: Stony Plain (Porcepic) ISBN 0-88878-010-9
- 1977: Out Of Place (Porcepic) ISBN 0-88878-074-5
- 1981: Life Sentence: Poems and Journals: 1976-1980
- 2000: The Other Harmony: The Collected Poetry of Eli Mandel, compilation (Canadian Plains Research Centre) ISBN 0-88977-138-3
Criticism
[edit]- 1966: Criticism: The Silent-Speaking Words, Eight Talks for CBC Radio (CBC Publications)
- 1969: Irving Layton (Forum House), edited by William French
- 1977: Another Time (Porcepic) ISBN 0-88878-077-X
- 1986: The Family Romance (Turnstone) ISBN 0-88801-103-2
Other works
[edit]- 1981: Dreaming Backwards, compilation of revisions from 1954 to 1981 (General) ISBN 0-7736-1091-X
Edited
[edit]- Poets of Contemporary Canada, Toronto: McClelland & Stewart (New Canadian Library).
Discography
[edit]- 2001: Celebration: Famous Canadian Poets CD Canadian Poetry Association — ISBN 1-55253-031-0 (CD#2) (with Dorothy Livesay )
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Kizuk, R. Alexander. "Desert Words: Eli Mandel’s Poetry" http://www.uwo.ca/english/canadianpoetry/cpjrn/vol49/kizuk.htm Archived 2011-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
- M. Casey, Diana. "Eli Mandel" Great Neck Publishing
- Davey, Frank (2001). "Mandel, Eli". In Benson, Eugene; Toye, William (eds.). The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-541167-6.
- Hatch, Ronald B. (1996). "Mandel, Eli(as Wolf)". In Hamilton, Ian (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Poetry in English. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280042-8.
- Matthews, Lawrence. "The Martian of Estevan". ECW Press Ltd, 2001
- Ravvin, Norman (Winter 1994). "Humanities -- Myth, Origins, Magic: A Study of Form in Eli Mandel's Writing by Andrew Stubbs". University of Toronto Quarterly. 64 (1): 211–213. ProQuest 224049675.
- Helwig, Maggie (23 May 1987). "'Romance' a record by which poet puts theory into practice". Toronto Star. p. M4. ProQuest 435571429.
- Fetherling, Douglas (February 1993). "Mandel remembered". Books in Canada. 22 (1): 56. ProQuest 215191436.
- Querengesser, Neil (Spring 2003). "Opening Words". Canadian Literature (176): 166–167, 205. ProQuest 218820989.
- Sacuta, Norm (13 September 1992). "Eli Mandel, 1922-1992". Edmonton Journal. p. D6.
Notes
[edit]- ^ M. Casey, Diana. "Eli Mandel" Great Neck Publishing
- ^ a b Sharon Drache, "Mandel, Eli," Canadian Encyclopedia (Edmonton:Hurtig, 1988), 1290.
- ^ Kizuk, R. Alexander. "Desert Words: Eli Mandel’s Poetry" http://www.uwo.ca/english/canadianpoetry/cpjrn/vol49/kizuk.htm Archived 2011-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Colin Boyd, "Mandel, Eli," Canadian Encyclopedia Web, July 10, 2006.
- ^ a b "Eli Mandel fonds - University of Manitoba Archives". umlarchives.lib.umanitoba.ca. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
- ^ Doug Gent, "Mandel, Eli," Elias "Eli" Wolf Mandel Bio Web, May 27, 2012.
- ^ "Elias (Eli) Wolf Mandel Biography," Estevan, Saskatechewan, Gent-Family.com, Web, Apr. 25, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g Davey, Frank (2001). "Mandel, Eli". In Benson, Eugene; Toye, William (eds.). The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-541167-6.
- ^ a b "Phyllis Webb," Canadian Women Poets, BrockU.ca, Web, Apr. 12, 2011
- ^ Matthews, Lawrence (Spring 1989). "The Martian of Estevan". Essays on Canadian Writing. 37: 155–160.
- ^ Fetherling, Douglas (February 1993). "Mandel remembered". Books in Canada. 22 (1): 56. ProQuest 215191436.
- ^ Querengesser, Neil (Spring 2003). "Opening Words". Canadian Literature (176): 166–167, 205. ProQuest 218820989.
- ^ a b "Eli Mandel," Online Guide to Writing in Canada, track0.com, Web, May 1, 2011.
Further reading
[edit]- Norman Ravvin, "Placed Upon the Landscape, Casting Shadows: Jewish Canadian Monuments and Other Forms of Memory", Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes vol. 31: (104-14), May 2021.
- Adam Sol, David S. Koffman, Gary Barwin, Michael Greenstein, Ruth Panofsky, Lisa Richter, Emily Robins Sharpe, and Rhea Tregebov, “Canadian Jewish Poetry: A Roundtable”, Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes vol. 34: (142-71), 2022.
External links
[edit]- OneZeroZero: Eli Mandel, accessed 10 July 2006
- Sask 2005: Eli Mandel profile, accessed 10 July 2006
- University of Manitoba collections: Eli Mandel fonds summary, accessed 10 July 2006
- Mandel, The Canadian Encyclopedia accessed 20 November 2019
- "A Little More on Eli Mandel's Greatness
- 1922 births
- 1992 deaths
- 20th-century Canadian poets
- Canadian male poets
- Jewish Canadian writers
- Canadian people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada
- Governor General's Award–winning poets
- Jewish poets
- People from Estevan
- Writers from Saskatchewan
- University of Saskatchewan alumni
- University of Toronto alumni
- Academic staff of York University
- 20th-century Canadian male writers
- Canadian military personnel of World War II