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Doing Well in the International Thing?: Mavis Gallant, “The Ice Wagon Going Down the Street” (1963)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2017

Silvia Mergenthal
Affiliation:
University of Constance
Reingard M. Nischik
Affiliation:
Reingard M. Nischik is Professor and chair of American literature at the University of Constance, Germany.
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Summary

Mavis Gallant was born Mavis Young in Montreal in 1922. She was educated initially — rather unusually, given her English-speaking family background — in a French-speaking convent school, after which she attended various schools in Canada and in the United States. Upon graduating from High School in Pine Plains, New York, she returned to Canada, where she held various clerical jobs in Montreal and Ottawa, and then worked as a journalist for the Montreal Standard. In 1950 she emigrated to Europe, where she spent extended periods of time in the South of France, Austria, Italy, and Spain, before eventually settling in Paris. She returned to Canada to a post as writer-in-residence at the University of Toronto from 1983 till 1984, but has lived in Paris since then (Schaub 1998, xiii–xiv, 1–7).

In 1950, The New Yorker accepted Gallant's first short story, and subsequently nearly all of her short fiction has appeared in this magazine. Her stories have been collected in The Other Paris: Stories (1956); My Heart Is Broken: Eight Stories and a Short Novel (1964); The Pegnitz Junction: A Novella and Five Short Stories (1973); The End of the World and Other Stories (1974); From the Fifteenth District: A Novella and Eight Short Stories (1979); Home Truths: Selected Canadian Stories (1981); Overhead in a Balloon: Stories of Paris (1985); In Transit (1988); Across the Bridge: New Stories (1993); The Moslem Wife and Other Stories (1994); and The Selected Stories of Mavis Gallant (1996). Gallant has also published two novels, Green Water, Green Sky: A Novel (1959) and A Fairly Good Time: A Novel (1970), as well as a play, What Is to Be Done? (1983). Her non-fictional prose has been anthologized in Paris Notebooks: Essays and Reviews (1988), which includes one of her rare commentaries on her own writing, the essay “What Is Style?” Other autobiographical and autocritical comments can be found in interviews, introductions, and prefaces, for instance to Home Truths: Selected Canadian Stories and to Selected Stories.

Numerous critics, most comprehensively Danielle Schaub in a book-length literary biography, have remarked on Gallant's “invisibility” in Canada before the 1980s (Schaub 1998, 6), attributing this variously to her physical absence from Canada and her New Yorker affiliations, her proclaimed indebtedness to European and North American (rather than Canadian) writers, and her seeming unwillingness to align herself with Canadian literary traditions. Schaub explains:

Type
Chapter
Information
The Canadian Short Story
Interpretations
, pp. 191 - 202
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2007

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