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French-Canadian novelist, poet, playwright, and short-story writer,
noted for her examination of the lives of the Quebeçois. Hébert
combined realism and symbolism, and reworked the tradition of the
historical novel. In her poems, Hébert used free verse with dense,
closely packed images, achieving an almost surrealistic effect.
Her novels show influence of the French nouveau roman and
post-modern narrative techniques.
Anne Hébert was born in Sainte-Catherine-de-Fossambault, about
25 miles (40 kilometres) from Québec city. She started to write
poetry in her teens under the tutelage of her father, Maurice-Lang
Hébert (1888-1960), a provincial civil servant and a distinguished
literary critic. Another crucial person in Hébert's life was her
cousin, Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau (1912-43), a poet, who died
of a heart attack at the age of 31.
Hébert attended Collège Saint-Coeur de Marie, Merici, Quebec, and
Collège Notre Dame, Bellevue, Quebec. She worked for Radio Canada
(1950-53), and the National Film Board of Canada (1953-54, 1959-60).
In the mid-1950s she moved to Paris, but made frequent visits to
Canada. Her first collection of poems, Les Songes en Éguilabre
appeared in 1942, but the traditional collection did not predict
the anger of Le Torrent (1950, The Torrent), a collection
of short stories. In Le Tombeau des Rois (1953) Hébert explored
cold-bloodedly her anguish, the stifling responsibilities of maturity,
and repression and revolt, particularly in relation to a Quebec
dominated and oppressed by king and clergy.
Fantastic elements were present already in Hébert's first novel,
Les Chambres de bois (1958, The Silent Rooms), and continued
to appear in her subsequent works. Les Chambres de bois was
about a woman whose husband has a horror of sex. The heroine, Catherine,
revolts against the marital prison, and breaks out of the rooms
of the title. Kamouraska (1970) was based on stories Hébert's
mother had told her but also on historical research. It began the
cycle in the 19th-century Quebec, and was based on a historical
murder, on a story of a woman who conspires with her lover to murder
her husband.
Les Enfants de Sabbat (1975, Children of the Black Sabbath)
was a tale of witchcraft, incest, and intercourse with the devil.
Julie, the protagonist, is dedicated to sorcery and lives out a
perverse version of the virgin birth. The novel was poorly received
in Quebec. In Héloïse (1980) the title character belongs to a community
of vampires that dwells among abandoned Parisian subway stations.
Héloïse haunts the underground and sucks the blood of Métro
passengers. In the story, a young couple is destroyed by vampires.
In Les fous de Bassan (1982, In the Shadow of the Wind) Hébert
depicted people in an English-speaking village in the Gaspé. Six
narratives relate from different angles the rape and murder of two
cousins, Nora and Olivia, by their cousin Stevens.
In the late1990s Hébert returned to Canada after learning she was
terminally ill. She died of bone cancer on January 22, 2000, in
Montreal, Quebec. Hébert never married and had no children. Her
last novel, Un Habit de Lumière, appeared in 1998.
For further reading: Anne Hébert: In Search of the First
Garden by Kelton W. Knight (1999); Anne Hébert, son oeuvre, leurs
exils by Neil B. Bishop (1993); Anne Hébert by Janet M. Paterson
(1985); La femme à la fenêtre by Maurice Émond (1984); Anne Hébert
by Delbert W. Russell (1983); La quête d'équilibre dans l'oeuvre
romanesque d'Anne Hébert by Serge A. Thériault (1980); Entre songe
et parole by P.H. Lemieux (1978); Anne Hébert by R. Lacôte (1969);
Anne Hébert by P.Pagé (1965) - For further information:
Anne Hébert ; Anne Hébert (in French)
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Selected works:
- Les Songes en Éguilabre, 1942
- Le Torrent, 1950 - The Torrent
- Le Tombeau des Rois, 1953 - The Tomb of the Kings
- Les Chambres
de bois, 1958 - The Silent Rooms
- Poèmes, 1960 - Poems - Governor
General's Award
- Saint-Denys Garneau and Anne Hébert, 1962 (bilingual)
- Le Temps sauvage, 1967
- Théâtre, 1967
- Dialogue sur la traduction,
1970 (with Frank Scott)
- Les petites villes, 1970
- Kamouraska, 1970 - Kamouraska - Prix des Libraires, France
- film in 1973, dir. by Claude Jutra, starring Geneviève Bujold
and Richard Jordan
- Les Enfants du sabbat, 1975 - Children of the Black Sabbath
- Governor General's Award
- L'Ile de la demoiselle, 1979
- Héloïse,
1980 - Heloise
- Les Fous de Bassan, 1982 - In the Shadow of the Wind - Prix
Fémina; France - film in 1986, dir. by Yves Simoneau, starring
Steve Banner, Charlotte Valandrey
- Selected Poems, 1987
- Le Premier Jardin, 1988 - The First Garden
- L'Enfant chargé
de songes, 1992 - Burden of Dreams
- Le Jour n'a d'égal que la
nuit, 1992
- Oeuvre poétique, 1950-1990, 1993
- Day Has No Equal
but Night, 1994
- Aurélien, Clara, Mademoiselle, et le Lieutenant
anglais, 1995 - Aurélien, Clara, Mademoiselle, and the English
Lieutenent
- Poèmes pour la main gauche, 1997
- Est-ce que je
te dérange?, 1998
- Un Habit de lumiere, 1999
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biblion This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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