»ΚΉΪΜεΣύ's Page Lectures welcomes author Elizabeth Hay
October 21, 2015
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A burgeoning lecture series presented by the »ΚΉΪΜεΣύβs Department of English welcomes author Elizabeth Hay to campus next week to discuss βthe pageβ β the act of writing, the writing life and community, or any aspect of putting words to paper the lecturer wants to explore.
β»ΚΉΪΜεΣύβs English is very pleased to welcome award-winning author Elizabeth Hay to the university,β says Shelley King, Head of the department. βThis series of lectures on βthe pageβ represents an exceptional opportunity for our students and the wider community to hear Canadian writers at the peak of their craft speak about their literary experiences. The concept is clever and catchy, and the first three speakers β Phil Hall, ErΓn Moure, Stan Dragland β have demonstrated convincingly the value of this series.β
The Page Lectures launched in 2012, when then-writer-in-residence Phil Hall proposed the event as a way to βinvigorate and challenge the university and Kingston artistic communities.β At the same time, with a play on words, it was an opportunity to honour Joanne Page, a local poet and artist. Ms. Page passed away in early 2015 of cancer. The series invites men and women writers alternately each year.

βThis is the first year of the lectures without Joanne. She represented the spirit of place for Kingstonβs writing community,β says Mr. Hall, Director of the Page Lectures. βIt will be a very special event this year, announcing and celebrating all of the support that has come forward for our series in the past year. Liz Hay is the perfect writer to have at this time. We are all looking forward to her talk.β
After Ms. Pageβs death, the Department of English pledged $25,000 from its Alumni Fund to act as seed-money for a new fund that would endow βThe Page Lecturesβ in perpetuity. The fund recognizes both Joanneβs contribution to Canadian writing and the importance of the newly inaugurated lecture series to creative writing within the department and the wider community. Dr. Steven Page, Joanneβs husband, matched this gift, and with further support from other family members and friends, the Joanne Page Lecture Fund was established in September 2015.
Ms. Page was a cherished member of the Kingston and Canadian literary scenes, with three books of poetry: The River and The Lake (1993), Persuasion for a Mathematician (2003), and Watermarks (2008), nominated for the Trillium Prize. She was also a talented painter and for many years, she wrote a column for the Whig-Standard called In Other Words, which focused on feminist issues and wisdom.
In years past, the Page Lectures welcomed writer Stan Dragland, who spoke about the life and work of Ms. Page; and poet ErΓn Moure, who wrote about experiments to expand the concept of what a page can mean for experimental and digital writing. In the inaugural year, Mr. Hallβs lecture, Notes From Gethsemani, spoke of monkβs libraries, the history of pages, vellum, and manuscripts.
Both Phil Hallβs lecture and Stan Draglandβs lecture have since been published in small book form.
Elizabeth Hay β this fall also promoting her new novel, His Whole Life β will present her public lecture Tuesday Oct. 27 at 2:30 pm in Watson Hall, Room 517. All welcome. More information is available on .