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{{multiple issues|
{{BLP primary sources|date=July 2017}}
{{Autobiography|date=September 2016|talk=Conflict of interest and Ownership issues with this autobiography}}
{{BLP sources|date=August 2016}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2013}}
{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] -->
{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] -->
| name = B.W. Powe
| name = B. W. Powe
| image = Bruce_123.jpg
| image = Bruce_123.jpg
| imagesize =
| imagesize =
| caption = B.W. Powe. September 2010
| caption = B. W. Powe. September 2010
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1955|3|23|df=yes}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1955|3|23|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], Canada
| birth_place = [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], Canada
| occupation = Writer--poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, journalist; Professor of Literature
| occupation = Writer--poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher; Associate Professor of Literature
| genres = fiction, non-fiction, poetry (lyric), essay, meditations
| genres = Fiction, non-fiction, poetry (lyric), essay, meditations
| movement =
| movement =
| net worth =
|influences = [[Marshall McLuhan]], [[Northrop Frye]], [[Pierre Trudeau]], [[William Blake]], [[Emily Dickinson]], [[Emily Brontë]], Walt Whitman´s 1855 version of Leaves of Grass, [[Henry Miller]], [[Pablo Neruda]], [[Peter Gabriel]], [[Saul Bellow]], Hermann Hesse, [[Anne Carson's Plainwater and Nox]], [[Arthur Rimbaud]], [[David Lean]], [[Cormac McCarthy]], [[Stanley Kubrick]], Thomas Mann´s The Magic Mountain, [[HD]]{{disambiguation needed|date=March 2013}}, [[Bruce Springsteen]], The Who´s Tommy, [[Fernando Pessoa]], [[Federico García Lorca]], [[Teresa of Avila]], [[Simone Weil]], [[Elias Canetti]], [[Hildegard von Bingen]], [[Teilhard de Chardin]], [[Richard Maurice Bucke]], [[Blade Runner]], [[Robinson Jeffers]], Raymond Carver's poetry, the later works of Hemingway, Susan Sontag's essays, Tomas Transtrumer, How Green was my Valley, The Tree of Life, Avatar, Midnight in Paris, music by Gustav Mahler, Maurice Ravel, Arvo Part, Steve Reich, Aaron Copland, Glenn Gould, Bruce Cockburn, Joni Mitchell; painters and sculptures--Antoni Tàpies, Joseph Amar, Jenny Holzer, Anselm Kiefer, Joseph Beuys; people and places: Raven, Kate and Tom, and Lucky, Barcelona, Paris, Bilbao, Quebec City, Bologna, Port Perry Ontario, Unionville Ontario, water and wind, Maria Auxi Sanchez Ledesma (Auxisita)...
| website =
| website =
| spouse =
| spouse = María Auxiliadora Sánchez Ledesma
| children = Katharine Powe<br>Thomas Powe
| children = Katharine Powe<br>Thomas Powe, Elena Theresa Sanchez Powe
}}{{Short description|Canadian poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, and teacher}}
|signature =
'''Bruce William Powe''' ({{IPAc-en|p|aʊ}}; born 23 March 1955), commonly known as '''B. W. Powe''', is a Canadian poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, and teacher.
}}

'''Bruce William Powe''' ({{IPAc-en|p|aʊ}}; born 23 March 1955) is a Canadian writer poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, and teacher.


==Early life and background==
==Early life and background==
Born in [[Ottawa]], Powe lived in [[Toronto]] from 1959 until 1996. His father is Bruce Allen Powe, author of the novels, ''Killing Ground'', ''The Aberhart Summer'' and ''The Ice Eaters''.
Born in [[Ottawa]], Powe lived in [[Toronto]] from 1959 until 1996. His father is Bruce Allen Powe, author of the novels, ''Killing Ground'', ''The Aberhart Summer'' and ''The Ice Eaters'', among many.


He attended [[York University]] for English studies where in 1977 graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Powe received a Master of Arts degree from the [[University of Toronto]] in 1981; he studied there with Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye. He received his PhD from York University in October 2009. His PhD is on Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, their crossings in history, their agon and complementarity (their conflicts and harmonies), and the stirring alchemy of their thought. The thesis was also concerned with the role and position of these visionaries in Canada, and the role and position of guides and mentors.
He attended [[York University]] in Toronto for English studies where in 1977 graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He won the prestigious Book Award at York University for the highest grades achieved in his final year. He was then awarded an also prestigious Humanities Research Council scholarship to continue his studies at the University of Toronto. Powe received a Master of Arts degree from the [[University of Toronto]] in 1981; he studied there with Marshall McLuhan, Northrop Frye and Brian Parker. He received his PhD from York University in October 2009. His PhD is on Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, their crossings in history, their agon and complementarity (their conflicts and harmonies), and the stirring alchemy of their thought. The thesis was also concerned with the role and position of these visionaries in Canada, and the role and position of guides and mentors.


His uncle is Joe Schlesinger, senior correspondent for the CBC news.
His uncle is Joe Schlesinger, senior correspondent for the CBC news.

On June 7, 2014, B. W. Powe was married to Maria Auxiliadora Sanchez Ledesma in Cordoba, Spain.


==Career==
==Career==
He was tenured and promoted to Associate Professor of Literature at York in July 2010. Powe currently teaches in the Department of English at York University. He lectures on visionary literature, teaching writers from [[Hildegard von Bingen]] and [[Dante]] to [[Bob Dylan]] and [[Joni Mitchell]], and conducts honour seminars on Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye. Powe continues to teach first year introduction to literature courses.
Poet, novelist, essayist, and critic, in 1995, B. W. Powe began teaching in the Department of English at York University where he taught first year introduction to literature courses as well as two additional courses entitled ''Visionary Literature: from [[Hildegard von Bingen]] and [[Dante]] to [[Bob Dylan]] and [[Joni Mitchell]]'', and ''[[Marshall McLuhan]] and [[Northrop Frye]]: Two Canadian Theorists''.
<ref>
{{cite book
|last = Various Authors
|title = Understanding Media, Today 2011-12 (Fuera de Colección)
|publisher=Editorial UOC
|date = Dec 1, 2011
|page = 28
|isbn = 9788493880255
|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=m2jX7G1OQp0C&q=Visionary+Literature%3A+From+Dante+to+Bob+Dylan%22+at+York+University&pg=PA28
}}
</ref>
In July, 2010, Powe was promoted to Associate Professor of Literature at York and given tenure.
<ref>
{{cite web
| last = Ralón
| first = Laureano
| title = Interview with B. W. Powe
| url = http://figureground.org/interview-with-b-w-powe/
| accessdate = 24 April 2015
| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20150424084120/http://figureground.org/interview-with-b-w-powe/
| archivedate = 24 April 2015 }}</ref>
Powe was the program director of the Creative Writing Program at York University during the 2013-2014 semester. At York he currently teaches courses on Modernism and Post-Modernism, and divides his time between researching visionary traditions (Visionary Literature: from Dante to Bob Dylan is still offered) and continuing the McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies.<ref>
{{cite web
| title = B. W. Powe
| url = http://people.laps.yorku.ca/people.nsf/researcherprofile?readform&shortname=bpowe
| accessdate = 24 April 2015
| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20150424074420/http://people.laps.yorku.ca/people.nsf/researcherprofile?readform&shortname=bpowe
| archivedate = 24 April 2015 }}</ref>


==Work==
In 1997 he moved to [[Whitchurch-Stouffville|Stouffville, Ontario]], where he still lives. His two children, Kate and Thomas (twins), enrolled at York University in 2010.
Powe has written books of thoughts, poetry, essays, and fiction (long and short). He has also written nationally seen columns for ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'' and the ''[[Toronto Star]]''.


He has been called "way cool" by ''The Globe and Mail'', "one of our finest cultural commentators" by the ''Toronto Star'', a poet who can write "hair-raising lines" that seem to come "fully formed from the cosmos" by ''The Globe and Mail'' and who takes "considerable, unfashionable risks" by ''[[The Malahat Review]]'', "a visionary--a modern day Magellan" by the ''[[Montreal Gazette]]'', "an intellectual terrorist" by [[Barbara Amiel]] in ''[[Maclean's]]'', and "enigmatic...and necessary..." by the ''[[Edmonton Journal]]''. [[Kenneth J. Harvey]] said Powe's "Heart beats against the current... [and in his work] at its ultimate core invents something original--and oftentimes breathtaking... To say brilliant would be an understatement" (''[[Ottawa Citizen]]'').
Powe was most recently [http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/books/marshall-mcluhan-media-theorist-is-celebrated.html?_r=1 featured in ''The New York Times''] in an article reflecting on Marshall McLuhan on the centennial of his birth.


About his novel ''Outage'', the ''[[Calgary Herald]]'' said: "Powe has created something remarkable...a sort of video novel, a hybrid of genres and media that transcends the ordinary and offers a new vision in a new way of a society dancing to electronically generated signals." [[Pico Iyer]] said his writings represented "a soaring alchemical vision." [[R. Murray Schafer]] called ''Outage'' "a fully realized work of art." Canadian Literature said of his poetry that "[his] subtly textured themes...affirm the importance of the romantic voice in these troubled times." The Montreal Gazette, in 2007, said that his essay prose style is "like well-chosen brush-strokes on a canvas."
An [http://www.yorku.ca/yfile/archive/index.asp?Article=17389 article] on Powe's work on McLuhan's centennial and of his most recent book, ''These Shadows Remain: A Fable'', was featured in [[York University]]'s YFile Daily Bulletin.


At IdeaCity in 2001 [[Moses Znaimer]] called B. W. Powe's stances, public lectures and writings "a combination of poetry and rock'n'roll." In 2014, poet-critic Patricia Keeney called Powe's work "an original combination of poetry and scholarship."
"[http://www.excal.on.ca/main/poweessay/ The Spectral Ball of Theory: A Lyrical Essay]", an essay originally intended for Powe's upcoming book, was featured in [[York University]]'s community newspaper, [http://www.excal.on.ca/ Exalibur].


Elana Wolff, poet and critic, in her book ''Implicate Me: Short Essays on Reading Contemporary Poems'' (Guernica, 2010), has this to say about Powe's writings:
The website for Ottawa'a Writer's Festival recently published an [http://www.writersfestival.org/blog/the-poetics-of-heartmaking-where-obsolescence-is-only-the-beginning article] on Powe's contribution to the festival this year.
"a prescient writer on the cyber-age and codes and patterns...there is actually no neat genre-division in Powe's writing. ...His prose frequently reads like poetry... ''The Unsaid Passing'' is...[an] emotionally unshielded selection of pieces that range in length from five words to several sections. ...Powe wants both transpersonal and transcendent connection from poetry. ...unabashedly spiritual, and passionate...uncommon for our age. He wants us to acknowledge our capacity for deep feeling, our vulnerability and authentic need for each other, and for the sacred. ...In the poems of ''The Unsaid Passing'', B.W. Powe goes where he has not gone in any of his previous work... and written luminous, numinous pieces of mystical and humanistic sensibility." (pp.&nbsp;119–121)


His work has been profiled on CBC-TV, TVO, CITY-TV, Bravo-TV, ACCESS and CTV.
==Works==
Powe has written books of thoughts, poetry, essays, and fiction (long and short). He has also written nationally-seen columns for ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'' and "The Toronto Star".
This is what the press has said over the years:
He has been called "way cool" by the ''[[The Globe and Mail|Globe and Mail]]'', "one of our finest cultural commentators" by the ''[[Toronto Star]]'', a poet who can write "hair-raising lines" that seem to come "fully formed from the cosmos" by ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'' and who takes "considerable, unfashionable risks" by The Malahat Review, "a visionary--a modern day Magellan" by The Montreal Gazette, "an intellectual terrorist" by Barbara Amiel in MacLean's, and "enigmatic...and necessary..." by The Edmonton Journal. Kenneth J. Harvey said Powe's "Heart beats against the current... [and in his work] at its ultimate core invents something original--and oftentimes breathtaking... To say brilliant would be an understatement..." (Ottawa Citizen)
About Outage, the Calgary Herald said, "Powe has created something remarkable...a sort of video novel, a hybrid of genres and media that transcends the ordinary and offers a new vision in a enw way of a society dancing to electronically generated signals..."
[[Pico Iyer]] said his writings represented "a soaring alchemical vision." R. Murray Schafer called Outage "a fully realized work of art." Canadian Literature said of his poetry that "[his] subtly textured themes...affirm the importance of the romantic voice in these troubled times." The Montreal Gazette, in 2007, said that his essay prose style is "like well-chosen brush-strokes on a canvas."
At IdeaCity in 2001 Moses Znaimer called B.W. Powe's stances, public lectures and writings "a combination of poetry and rock'n'roll."


''Outage'', was listed as one of the best ten novels of the year by Philip Marchand in the ''Toronto Star'', in 1995/96. It was also an editor's choice novel in ''The Globe & Mail'' in 1995. His book, ''A Tremendous Canada of Light'' was selected as a notable book of the year by ''The Globe and Mail'' in 1993. His book of poems, ''The Unsaid Passing'', was shortlisted for The ReLit Prize in 2006. His novella, ''These Shadows Remain'', was longlisted for The ReLit Prize in 2012.
Elana Wolff, poet and critic, in her book Implicate Me: Short Essays on Reading Contemporary Poems (Guernica, 2010), has this to say about Powe's writings:
"...a prescient writer on the cyber-age and codes and patterns...there is actually no neat genre-division in Powe's writing. ...His prose frequently reads like poetry... The Unsaid Passing is...[an] emotionally unshielded selection of pieces that range in length from five words to several sections. ...Powe wants both transpersonal and transcendent connection from poetry. ...unabashedly spiritual, and passionate...uncommon for our age. He wants us to acknowledge our capacity for deep feeling, our vulnerability and authentic need for each other, and for the sacred. ...In the poems of The Unsaid Passing, B.W. Powe goes where he has not gone in any of his previous work... and written luminous, numinous pieces of mystical and humanistic sensibility."
(Pages 119-121)


''Towards a Canada of Light'' (2006; the third revision of the Canada of Light theme) and ''Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and the Rose'' (2007) were conceived as companion pieces, part of his contemplation of the visionary possibilities of Canada and its cultural legacy. In Charles Foran's October 2007 review of ''Mystic Trudeau'' in ''[[The Walrus]]'', he said of the book: "[it] likely makes of its subject only what Trudeau privately made of himself. Powe knew him in his final years and kept records of their conversations. Expanding on Trudeau's pithy remarks, Powe offers a reading of his character and legacy that is as challenging as many of Trudeau's own public assertions. The book is determined to credit Canada with a mystical tradition and to deliberate in that tradition's arguments, employing language that is poetic, emphatic... Wait for the book's kicker: a call for the establishment of a republic in a twenty-first Canada that has...pirouetted away from 'the last vestiges of colonialism and empire.'"
His work has been profiled on CBC-TV, TVO, CITY-TV, Bravo-TV, ACCESS and CTV.


''Mystic Trudeau'' was profiled and reviewed in an essay by Wilf Cude in The Antigonish Review (Summer 2014).
His novel, Outage, was listed as one of the best ten novels of the year by Philip Marchand in The Toronto Star, in 1995/96. It was also an editor's choice novel in the Globe & Mail in 1995.
His book, A Tremendous Canada of Light was selected as a notable book of the year by the Globe and Mail in 1993.
His book of poems, The Unsaid Passing, was shortlisted for The ReLit Prize in 2006.


His writings have been translated into French by Derrick de Kerckhove and Michelle Tisseyre. His writings have also been translated into Czech. He has been the program director or co-director for three significant events at York University in Toronto: ''Marshall McLuhan: What if He Was Right?'' (1997), ''The Trudeau Era'' (1998) and ''Living Literacies'' (2002).
Towards a Canada of Light (2006; the third revision of the Canada of Light theme) and Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and the Rose (2007) were conceived as companion pieces, part of his contemplation of the visionary possibilities of Canada and its cultural legacy. In Charles Forans's October 2007 review of Mystic Trudeau in The Walrus, he said of the book: "[it] likely makes of its subject only what Trudeau privately made of himself. Powe knew him in his final years and kept records of their conversations. Expanding on Trudeau's pithy remarks, Powe offers a reading of his character and legacy that is as challenging as many of Trudeau's own public assertions. The book is determined to credit Canada with a mystical tradition and to deliberate in that tradition's arguments, employing language that is poetic, emphatic... Wait for the book's kicker: a call for the establishment of a republic in a twenty-first Canada that has...pirouetted away from 'the last vestiges of colonialism and empire.'"


He is currently continuing to develop the McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies at York University.<ref>[http://www.mcluhanliteracies.ca/page16/page24/page24.html McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies, Staff] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706185150/http://www.mcluhanliteracies.ca/page16/page24/page24.html |date=6 July 2011 }}</ref>
His writings have been translated into French by Derrick de Kerckhove and Michelle Tisseyre. His writings have also been translated into Czech. He has been the program director or co-director for three significant events at York University in Toronto: Marshall McLuhan: What if He Was Right? (1997), The Trudeau Era (1998) and Living Literacies (2002). He is scheduled to become the Creative Writing Program Coordinator at York University in the summer 0f 2013.


He read from this work at The Northrop Frye International Festival in Moncton in April 2011, and in Barcelona, Spain, at the McLuhan 100 conference, in May 2011. He spoke on Vico, Bruno, Joyce and McLuhan in Naples in June 2011. In the autumn of 2012 he was scholar/writer in residence at IN3, the University of Catalonya in Barcelona. He spoke at the University of Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, in October 2012.
He is currently at work founding the McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies at York University, to be housed at Founders College.<ref>[http://www.mcluhanliteracies.ca/page16/page24/page24.html McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies, Staff]</ref>


His non-fiction study, ''Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye--Apocalypse and Alchemy'', was published by the University of Toronto Press in May 2014.
He read from this work at The Northrop Frye International Festival in Moncton in April 2011, and in Barcelona, Spain, at the McLuhan 100 conference, in May 2011. He spoke on Vico, Bruno, Joyce and McLuhan in Naples in June 2011.
In the autumn of 2012 he was scholar/writer in residence at IN3, the University of Catalonya in Barcelona. He spoke at the University of Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, in October 2012.


He returned as Scholar/Researcher in Residence at IN3 at the University of Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain, in the spring and summer of 2013, and then returned to IN3 in the spring-summer of 2014. There he was (and still is) collaborating with Cristina de Miranda (artist and professor) and Matteo Ciastellardi (technologist and professor) on the development and production of the meta-book, multi-text, "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold." This is an electronic work devoted to exploring new manifestations of consciousness and perception in the digital information age.
His non-fiction study, "Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye--Apocalypse and Alchemy", has been accepted by the University of Toronto Press for publication in the fall of 2014.


He was the Creative Writing Program Coordinator in the Department of English from July 2013 until June 2014.
He will be returning as Scholar/Researcher in Residence at IN3 at the University of Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain, in the spring and summer of 2013. There he will be collaborating with Cristina de Miranda (artist and professor) and Matteo Ciastellardi (technologist and professor) on the development and production of an e-book, "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold."


In the fall of 2014, he gave well-received lectures/presentations on his book, Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye: Apocalypse and Alchemy, at Founders College, York University, at Victoria College at the University of Toronto, the Mercer Union in Toronto, at the Italian Cultural Centre, and at St. Michael's College (in collaboration with Professor Robert Logan).
He has three other works in progress—new poems, a collection of essays,and a gathering of fragments and aphorisms and parables and thoughts.


He has other works in progress: new poems (for a book called ''Decoding Dust''); a collection of essays, thoughts, stories, and aphorisms; a study of visionaries and of the nature of inspiration; a trilogy of novels called ''The Forking of the Ways''. He has been at work since 2012 on a new book of poems and stories about his experiences in Spain—tentatively titled, ''Eternal Andalusia''.
==These Shadows Remain==
These Shadows Remain: A Fable is a novella published by Guernica in April 2011. It has garnered praise for its original concept and visionary story. Guernica Editions has summated the story, "Images overrun the world. Toons filled with rage and hate hunger for life. A war between simulations and humans. People besieged in a castle of dreams. A mysterious knight shifts between worlds, holding the secret that could save all. Orphaned children lead him to the whirlwind, the terrible faceless source."


In 2014 he began an editorial-creative relationship with the ''Hamilton Arts and Letters'' (HAL) publication.
These Shadows Remain was longlisted for the ReLit Prize in 2012.


In 2015 he founded a theatre group at York University, called The Dead Tree Medium Group. The troupe consists of York University Theatre/Creative Writing students. They performed "Technogenie" from ''Decoding Dust'' at the Pages Unbound Literary Festival in Toronto in May. In 2015, he was nominated to become a member of the [[Royal Society of Canada]] (he was rejected).
These Shadows Remain is a work of vision. Powe says the story came intact in a recurring dream. When he first had the dream, he wrote down and outline. The more the story appeared in his dreams, the more he added.<ref>[http://www.openbooktoronto.com/news/interview_with_bw_powe Interview with B.W. Powe | Open Book: Toronto]</ref>


Also in 2015, he was nominated for a total of six awards for his two books, ''Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye: Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye'', and ''Where Seas and Fables Meet''.
Author [[Charles Foran]] has said, "...(I) am quite haunted by the book. It is, to say the least, intriguing, and its resonances are only settling in. The form itself is fascinating: a parable? A fable? A story for children, via their parents, or for parents, via their children? As per the Powe aesthetic, it is resolutely NOT of our time and our, ahem, literary culture, and belongs somewhere deep in a European literary tradition, where Carroll and Grimm sit alongside Musil and Amis. But I am also aware of the strong visual component to the tale, its cross of children's cartoon with anime... Likewise, its themes, or preoccupations, with how we've been so altered, chemically, spiritually, by those toons, those simulations. THAT is North American, of course, Canadian-McLuhan-Gibson, if also, I suspect, Eastern, Japanese. An enigmatic, striking piece of writing, one I shall return to."


In the summer of 2015, he returned to be Writer-Scholar in Residence at IN3, the University of Catalunya, now in Casteldefels, Spain. In 2015 he gave lectures and readings in Barcelona, Toronto, and Ottawa.
Critic Marshall Soules acclaimed, "You've captured something important about our culture in These Shadows Remain... It's a compelling allegory about the mutual influence of the parallel worlds we live in, how we don't pay attention to important matters, how children are being sacrificed to a realm of fantasy. As a fable, it's of-a-piece with (Powe's) other work, coming at familiar themes in a different mode and register. Its poetry comes from fairy tale, romance, and pop culture."

"There are mysteries remaining, such as the migration between the screen and human world. The knight's confrontation with the wizard seems inconclusive and lacking in confrontation and resolution, but I appreciate this outcome. The wizard is also confused, and his power is limited. I like that. Reminds me of the Wizard of Oz - all smoke and mirrors and bluster. And recalls [[Edwin Abbot's]] satirical [[Flatland]]. I also enjoyed the role and character you gave the children. It's a caring and inspiring story that reflects directly on our confusion over fantasy and reality. On Hollywood Blvd., it's clear that fantasy is winning the battle for mindshare!"


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* 1984: ''A Climate Charged'' (Mosaic) [[hardcopy]] ISBN 0-88962-259-0, paperback ISBN 0-88962-258-2
* 1984: "A Climate Charged" (Mosaic) {{ISBN|0-88962-258-2}}
* 1987: ''The Solitary Outlaw'' (Lester & Orpen Dennys) ISBN 0-88619-141-6
* 1987: "The Solitary Outlaw" (Lester & Orpen Dennys) {{ISBN|0-88619-141-6}}
* 1989: ''Noise of Time'' in The Glenn Gould Profile, in Collections Canada, National Library Archives
* 1989: "Noise of Time" in "The Glenn Gould Profile", Collections Canada, National Library Archives
* 1993: ''A Tremendous Canada of Light'' (Coach House) ISBN 0-88910-415-8
* 1993: "A Tremendous Canada of Light" (Coach House) {{ISBN|0-88910-415-8}}
* 1995: ''Outage: A Journey into Electric City'' (Random House) ISBN 0-394-22124-9
* 1995: "Outage: A Journey into Electric City" (Random House) {{ISBN|0-394-22124-9}}
* 1997: ''The Solitary Outlaw'' revised, expanded (Somerville House)ISBN 1-895897-79-3
* 1997: "The Solitary Outlaw", revised and expanded (Somerville House){{ISBN|1-895897-79-3}}
* 1997: ''A Canada of Light'' revised, expanded (Somerville House) ISBN 1-895897-89-0
* 1997: "A Canada of Light", revised and expanded (Somerville House) {{ISBN|1-895897-89-0}}
* 2004: ''The Living Literacies'' Print Record, editor (Coach House) ISBN 0-9736828-0-9
* 2004: "The Living Literacies Print Record", editor (Coach House) {{ISBN|0-9736828-0-9}}
* 2005: ''The Unsaid Passing'' (Guernica) ISBN 1-55071-209-8
* 2005: "The Unsaid Passing" (Guernica) {{ISBN|1-55071-209-8}}
* 2006: ''Towards a Canada of Light'' (Thomas Allen) ISBN 0-88762-228-3
* 2006: "Towards a Canada of Light", revised and expanded again (Thomas Allen) {{ISBN|0-88762-228-3}}
* 2007: ''Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and The Rose'' (Thomas Allen) ISBN 0-88762-281-X
* 2007: "Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and The Rose" (Thomas Allen) {{ISBN|0-88762-281-X}}
* 2011: "These Shadows Remain: A Fable" (Guernica) ISBN 978-1-55071-314-5
* 2011: "These Shadows Remain: A Fable" (Guernica) {{ISBN|978-1-55071-314-5}}
* 2014: "Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye--Apocalypse and Alchemy" (The University of Toronto Press)
* 2014: "Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, Apocalypse and Alchemy" (The University of Toronto Press) {{ISBN|978-1-4426-4811-1}}
* 2014: Two Poems, "Reader" and "Technogenie" in "The Medium is the Muse: Channeling Marshall McLuhan", edited by Lance Strate and Adeena Karasick (Neo Poiesis Press), {{ISBN|978-0-9855577-5-1}}
* 2014: "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold." (In3, University of catalunya/York University).
* 2014-15: "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold." (IN3, University of Catalunya/York University)
* 2015: "Where Seas and Fables Meet: Aphorisms and Parables" (Guernica)
* 2015: "Where Seas and Fables Meet: Parables, Aphorisms, Fragments, Thought" (Guernica) {{ISBN|978-1-77183-019-5}}

* 2016: "Decoding Dust" (Neo Poiesis Press). {{ISBN|978-0-9903565-8-5}} Spring 2016
* 2016: "The Tigers of Perception" (Hamilton Arts and Letters: HAL/Samizdat). Autumn 2016
* 2019: "The Charge in the Global Membrane" (Neo Poiesis Press). {{ISBN|978-0-9975021-8-3}}
==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}

<references />


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikiquote}}
* [http://www.openbooktoronto.com/news/interview_with_bw_powe Interview with B.W. Powe] by Adebe D.A for Openbook Toronto, 27 January 2011.
* [http://www.bwpowe.net B.W. Powe's blog]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20141206134136/http://www.openbooktoronto.com/news/interview_with_bw_powe Interview with B.W. Powe] by Adebe D.A for Openbook Toronto, 27 January 2011.
* [http://www.bwpowe.org B.W. Powe official website] (inactive as of 17 September 2008)
*[http://www.media-studies.ca/articles/powe.htm Soules, Marshall: Bruce Powe & The Solitary Outlaws]
*[http://www.media-studies.ca/articles/powe.htm Soules, Marshall: Bruce Powe & The Solitary Outlaws]
*[http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/glenngould/028010-502.10-e.html The Glenn Gould Archive (Library and Archives Canada): ''Noise of Time'']
*[http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/glenngould/028010-502.10-e.html The Glenn Gould Archive (Library and Archives Canada): ''Noise of Time'']
* [http://www.exilequarterly.com/164b.html ''15 Years in Exile'', Volume 16, Number 4] (Winter 1992)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081020140259/http://www.exilequarterly.com/164b.html ''15 Years in Exile'', Volume 16, Number 4] (Winter 1992)
* [http://www.spiritbookword.net/spirit/an_interview_with_bw_powe.shtml Spiritbookword: "An Interview with B.W. Powe"]
* [http://www.spiritbookword.net/spirit/an_interview_with_bw_powe.shtml Spiritbookword: "An Interview with B.W. Powe"]
* http://www.imaginingtoronto.com/2007week3slidesGEOG4280.ppt
* https://web.archive.org/web/20071022004712/http://www.imaginingtoronto.com/2007week3slidesGEOG4280.ppt
* [http://archivesfa.library.yorku.ca/fonds/ON00370-f0000103.htm York University: B.W. Powe fonds], accessed 17 July 2006
* [http://archivesfa.library.yorku.ca/fonds/ON00370-f0000103.htm York University: B.W. Powe fonds], accessed 17 July 2006
* [http://www.arts.yorku.ca/english/people/powe.html York University: B.W. Powe], accessed 17 July 2006
* [http://www.arts.yorku.ca/english/people/powe.html York University: B.W. Powe]{{Dead link|date=October 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, accessed 17 July 2006
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/books/marshall-mcluhan-media-theorist-is-celebrated.html?_r=1], accessed 26 July 2011
* [https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/books/marshall-mcluhan-media-theorist-is-celebrated.html?_r=1 Early Media Prophet Is Now Getting His Due], accessed 26 July 2011


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Powe, B.W.}}
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[[Category:1955 births]]
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[[Category:Canadian philosophers]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian philosophers]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian philosophers]]
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[[Category:Canadian male novelists]]
[[Category:Canadian poets]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian poets]]
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[[Category:Writers from Ottawa]]
[[Category:Writers from Ottawa]]
[[Category:Poets from Ontario]]
[[Category:Writers from Toronto]]
[[Category:Writers from Toronto]]
[[Category:University of Toronto alumni]]
[[Category:University of Toronto alumni]]
[[Category:York University alumni]]
[[Category:York University alumni]]
[[Category:York University faculty]]
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[[Category:English literature academics]]
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[[Category:20th-century Canadian male writers]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian essayists]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian male writers]]

Latest revision as of 03:04, 30 April 2024

B. W. Powe
B. W. Powe. September 2010
B. W. Powe. September 2010
Born (1955-03-23) 23 March 1955 (age 69)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
OccupationWriter--poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher; Associate Professor of Literature
GenresFiction, non-fiction, poetry (lyric), essay, meditations
SpouseMaría Auxiliadora Sánchez Ledesma
ChildrenKatharine Powe
Thomas Powe, Elena Theresa Sanchez Powe

Bruce William Powe (/p/; born 23 March 1955), commonly known as B. W. Powe, is a Canadian poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, and teacher.

Early life and background[edit]

Born in Ottawa, Powe lived in Toronto from 1959 until 1996. His father is Bruce Allen Powe, author of the novels, Killing Ground, The Aberhart Summer and The Ice Eaters, among many.

He attended York University in Toronto for English studies where in 1977 graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He won the prestigious Book Award at York University for the highest grades achieved in his final year. He was then awarded an also prestigious Humanities Research Council scholarship to continue his studies at the University of Toronto. Powe received a Master of Arts degree from the University of Toronto in 1981; he studied there with Marshall McLuhan, Northrop Frye and Brian Parker. He received his PhD from York University in October 2009. His PhD is on Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, their crossings in history, their agon and complementarity (their conflicts and harmonies), and the stirring alchemy of their thought. The thesis was also concerned with the role and position of these visionaries in Canada, and the role and position of guides and mentors.

His uncle is Joe Schlesinger, senior correspondent for the CBC news.

On June 7, 2014, B. W. Powe was married to Maria Auxiliadora Sanchez Ledesma in Cordoba, Spain.

Career[edit]

Poet, novelist, essayist, and critic, in 1995, B. W. Powe began teaching in the Department of English at York University where he taught first year introduction to literature courses as well as two additional courses entitled Visionary Literature: from Hildegard von Bingen and Dante to Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell, and Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye: Two Canadian Theorists. [1] In July, 2010, Powe was promoted to Associate Professor of Literature at York and given tenure. [2] Powe was the program director of the Creative Writing Program at York University during the 2013-2014 semester. At York he currently teaches courses on Modernism and Post-Modernism, and divides his time between researching visionary traditions (Visionary Literature: from Dante to Bob Dylan is still offered) and continuing the McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies.[3]

Work[edit]

Powe has written books of thoughts, poetry, essays, and fiction (long and short). He has also written nationally seen columns for The Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star.

He has been called "way cool" by The Globe and Mail, "one of our finest cultural commentators" by the Toronto Star, a poet who can write "hair-raising lines" that seem to come "fully formed from the cosmos" by The Globe and Mail and who takes "considerable, unfashionable risks" by The Malahat Review, "a visionary--a modern day Magellan" by the Montreal Gazette, "an intellectual terrorist" by Barbara Amiel in Maclean's, and "enigmatic...and necessary..." by the Edmonton Journal. Kenneth J. Harvey said Powe's "Heart beats against the current... [and in his work] at its ultimate core invents something original--and oftentimes breathtaking... To say brilliant would be an understatement" (Ottawa Citizen).

About his novel Outage, the Calgary Herald said: "Powe has created something remarkable...a sort of video novel, a hybrid of genres and media that transcends the ordinary and offers a new vision in a new way of a society dancing to electronically generated signals." Pico Iyer said his writings represented "a soaring alchemical vision." R. Murray Schafer called Outage "a fully realized work of art." Canadian Literature said of his poetry that "[his] subtly textured themes...affirm the importance of the romantic voice in these troubled times." The Montreal Gazette, in 2007, said that his essay prose style is "like well-chosen brush-strokes on a canvas."

At IdeaCity in 2001 Moses Znaimer called B. W. Powe's stances, public lectures and writings "a combination of poetry and rock'n'roll." In 2014, poet-critic Patricia Keeney called Powe's work "an original combination of poetry and scholarship."

Elana Wolff, poet and critic, in her book Implicate Me: Short Essays on Reading Contemporary Poems (Guernica, 2010), has this to say about Powe's writings: "a prescient writer on the cyber-age and codes and patterns...there is actually no neat genre-division in Powe's writing. ...His prose frequently reads like poetry... The Unsaid Passing is...[an] emotionally unshielded selection of pieces that range in length from five words to several sections. ...Powe wants both transpersonal and transcendent connection from poetry. ...unabashedly spiritual, and passionate...uncommon for our age. He wants us to acknowledge our capacity for deep feeling, our vulnerability and authentic need for each other, and for the sacred. ...In the poems of The Unsaid Passing, B.W. Powe goes where he has not gone in any of his previous work... and written luminous, numinous pieces of mystical and humanistic sensibility." (pp. 119–121)

His work has been profiled on CBC-TV, TVO, CITY-TV, Bravo-TV, ACCESS and CTV.

Outage, was listed as one of the best ten novels of the year by Philip Marchand in the Toronto Star, in 1995/96. It was also an editor's choice novel in The Globe & Mail in 1995. His book, A Tremendous Canada of Light was selected as a notable book of the year by The Globe and Mail in 1993. His book of poems, The Unsaid Passing, was shortlisted for The ReLit Prize in 2006. His novella, These Shadows Remain, was longlisted for The ReLit Prize in 2012.

Towards a Canada of Light (2006; the third revision of the Canada of Light theme) and Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and the Rose (2007) were conceived as companion pieces, part of his contemplation of the visionary possibilities of Canada and its cultural legacy. In Charles Foran's October 2007 review of Mystic Trudeau in The Walrus, he said of the book: "[it] likely makes of its subject only what Trudeau privately made of himself. Powe knew him in his final years and kept records of their conversations. Expanding on Trudeau's pithy remarks, Powe offers a reading of his character and legacy that is as challenging as many of Trudeau's own public assertions. The book is determined to credit Canada with a mystical tradition and to deliberate in that tradition's arguments, employing language that is poetic, emphatic... Wait for the book's kicker: a call for the establishment of a republic in a twenty-first Canada that has...pirouetted away from 'the last vestiges of colonialism and empire.'"

Mystic Trudeau was profiled and reviewed in an essay by Wilf Cude in The Antigonish Review (Summer 2014).

His writings have been translated into French by Derrick de Kerckhove and Michelle Tisseyre. His writings have also been translated into Czech. He has been the program director or co-director for three significant events at York University in Toronto: Marshall McLuhan: What if He Was Right? (1997), The Trudeau Era (1998) and Living Literacies (2002).

He is currently continuing to develop the McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies at York University.[4]

He read from this work at The Northrop Frye International Festival in Moncton in April 2011, and in Barcelona, Spain, at the McLuhan 100 conference, in May 2011. He spoke on Vico, Bruno, Joyce and McLuhan in Naples in June 2011. In the autumn of 2012 he was scholar/writer in residence at IN3, the University of Catalonya in Barcelona. He spoke at the University of Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, in October 2012.

His non-fiction study, Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye--Apocalypse and Alchemy, was published by the University of Toronto Press in May 2014.

He returned as Scholar/Researcher in Residence at IN3 at the University of Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain, in the spring and summer of 2013, and then returned to IN3 in the spring-summer of 2014. There he was (and still is) collaborating with Cristina de Miranda (artist and professor) and Matteo Ciastellardi (technologist and professor) on the development and production of the meta-book, multi-text, "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold." This is an electronic work devoted to exploring new manifestations of consciousness and perception in the digital information age.

He was the Creative Writing Program Coordinator in the Department of English from July 2013 until June 2014.

In the fall of 2014, he gave well-received lectures/presentations on his book, Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye: Apocalypse and Alchemy, at Founders College, York University, at Victoria College at the University of Toronto, the Mercer Union in Toronto, at the Italian Cultural Centre, and at St. Michael's College (in collaboration with Professor Robert Logan).

He has other works in progress: new poems (for a book called Decoding Dust); a collection of essays, thoughts, stories, and aphorisms; a study of visionaries and of the nature of inspiration; a trilogy of novels called The Forking of the Ways. He has been at work since 2012 on a new book of poems and stories about his experiences in Spain—tentatively titled, Eternal Andalusia.

In 2014 he began an editorial-creative relationship with the Hamilton Arts and Letters (HAL) publication.

In 2015 he founded a theatre group at York University, called The Dead Tree Medium Group. The troupe consists of York University Theatre/Creative Writing students. They performed "Technogenie" from Decoding Dust at the Pages Unbound Literary Festival in Toronto in May. In 2015, he was nominated to become a member of the Royal Society of Canada (he was rejected).

Also in 2015, he was nominated for a total of six awards for his two books, Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye: Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, and Where Seas and Fables Meet.

In the summer of 2015, he returned to be Writer-Scholar in Residence at IN3, the University of Catalunya, now in Casteldefels, Spain. In 2015 he gave lectures and readings in Barcelona, Toronto, and Ottawa.

Bibliography[edit]

  • 1984: "A Climate Charged" (Mosaic) ISBN 0-88962-258-2
  • 1987: "The Solitary Outlaw" (Lester & Orpen Dennys) ISBN 0-88619-141-6
  • 1989: "Noise of Time" in "The Glenn Gould Profile", Collections Canada, National Library Archives
  • 1993: "A Tremendous Canada of Light" (Coach House) ISBN 0-88910-415-8
  • 1995: "Outage: A Journey into Electric City" (Random House) ISBN 0-394-22124-9
  • 1997: "The Solitary Outlaw", revised and expanded (Somerville House)ISBN 1-895897-79-3
  • 1997: "A Canada of Light", revised and expanded (Somerville House) ISBN 1-895897-89-0
  • 2004: "The Living Literacies Print Record", editor (Coach House) ISBN 0-9736828-0-9
  • 2005: "The Unsaid Passing" (Guernica) ISBN 1-55071-209-8
  • 2006: "Towards a Canada of Light", revised and expanded again (Thomas Allen) ISBN 0-88762-228-3
  • 2007: "Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and The Rose" (Thomas Allen) ISBN 0-88762-281-X
  • 2011: "These Shadows Remain: A Fable" (Guernica) ISBN 978-1-55071-314-5
  • 2014: "Marshall McLuhan and Northrop Frye, Apocalypse and Alchemy" (The University of Toronto Press) ISBN 978-1-4426-4811-1
  • 2014: Two Poems, "Reader" and "Technogenie" in "The Medium is the Muse: Channeling Marshall McLuhan", edited by Lance Strate and Adeena Karasick (Neo Poiesis Press), ISBN 978-0-9855577-5-1
  • 2014-15: "Opening Time: On the Energy Threshold." (IN3, University of Catalunya/York University)
  • 2015: "Where Seas and Fables Meet: Parables, Aphorisms, Fragments, Thought" (Guernica) ISBN 978-1-77183-019-5
  • 2016: "Decoding Dust" (Neo Poiesis Press). ISBN 978-0-9903565-8-5 Spring 2016
  • 2016: "The Tigers of Perception" (Hamilton Arts and Letters: HAL/Samizdat). Autumn 2016
  • 2019: "The Charge in the Global Membrane" (Neo Poiesis Press). ISBN 978-0-9975021-8-3

References[edit]

  1. ^ Various Authors (1 December 2011). Understanding Media, Today 2011-12 (Fuera de Colección). Editorial UOC. p. 28. ISBN 9788493880255.
  2. ^ Ralón, Laureano. "Interview with B. W. Powe". Archived from the original on 24 April 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  3. ^ "B. W. Powe". Archived from the original on 24 April 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  4. ^ McLuhan Initiative for the Study of Literacies, Staff Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine

External links[edit]