Biographies of Prominent
Quebecers
Last
revised:
August
2004
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Harry
Bernard
(1898-1979)
Damien-Claude
Bélanger,
Department
of History,
McGill
University
Journalist,
novelist, and literary critic, was born at London
, England
. The son of a restless French Canadian
businessman, he studied as a boy at Soissons,
at Paris ,
and at St. Albans,
Vermont.
In 1906 his family returned to Canada
and settled in Quebec
's Eastern Townships before relocating
to Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec.
From 1911 to 1919 he studied at the Séminaire de Saint-Hyacinthe.
After a dozen years in the Province
of Quebec,
his family moved to Boston
and Bernard trained briefly in the American army's Reserve Officer Training
Corps in the summer of 1918. A year later, he entered the world of journalism
at Ottawa 's
Le Droit. In 1923 he became the editor of the weekly Courrier
de Saint-Hyacinthe. He would hold this position until his retirement
in 1970. Bernard's earliest novel, L'homme tombé (1924),
was the first a series of regionalist works of fiction published in
the twenties and early thirties. He was the founding editor of one of
Quebec's
most influential intellectual journals, L'Action nationale ,
from 1933 to 1934. Bernard was also active in the founding of the Association
des hebdomadaires de langue française in 1932. He received a
licence ès lettres from the Université de Montréal
in 1942 and obtained a doctorate from the same institution in 1948 for
a dissertation on Le roman régionaliste aux États-Unis
(1913-1940). Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, his doctoral
research brought him into contact with the leading figures of literary
regionalism in the United States.
He was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 1943. Harry Bernard
was the first French Canadian writer to produce a major study of American
literature. His doctoral dissertation was published in 1949, though
early versions of several chapters had previously appeared in the Revue
de l'Université d'Ottawa. A conservative intellectual generally
critical of the American society he knew so well, Bernard was nonetheless
attracted by the genuine vitality of its regionalist literature.
©
2004 Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis
College
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