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Girls Like Me
My mother bought me the first book of my own, the first book I wrote my name in. It cost 39¢ and she bought it from the corner drugstore in our northeast working-class Edmonton neighbourhood. It stated boldly on the bottom right-hand corner of the cover that, “Your child’s life is enriched by beautiful poetry.” It was titled Favorite Poems to Read Aloud. Gyo Fujikawa designed the cover which featured a serenely smiling blond-haired girl in red Mary Janes, wearing a blue dress and white pinafore, and gazing into a large book resting in her lap. The corner of more books peeked from behind the toe of her shoe. The girl lounged against a big pillow, in front of a casement window with a criss-cross of black lines on the panes. Outside the window, a little bird rested on a tree branch as dots of snow fell from the sky.
“The female literary canon’s trajectory was a path that seemed to start, stop, and begin again as if nothing had come before.”
My first university English course was a survey course that spanned from Old English writing to modern writing in English. All those years. All that writing. All those writers. There was not one woman writer on the syllabus. Not. One. This was the male-centric canon that was supposed to provide the reference for me on my writing journey. Where was the space for women writers? Where was the space for a girl like me?A few years later, I took another university course: Women’s Literary Tradition. The very title—Women’s Literary Tradition—seemed to confirm the idea of the “otherness” of women’s writing. I was introduced to Julian of Norwich, Margery Kempe, Aphra Behn, Christine de Pizan…why hadn’t I encountered these writers in my first English survey course? It wasn’t even as if the female canon ran parallel to the male-centric canon. The female literary canon’s trajectory was a path that seemed to start, stop, and begin again as if nothing had come before. Who was I supposed to look to for inspiration if I was not even aware of who came before me? Why was there a separate canon for women’s writing and women writers? I wasn’t a prioress, a mystic, one of the first women to earn a living by writing, or a writer at an Italian court, but at least I now knew there was a lineage of women writers I could look to as I created a path for my own writing career.*When I looked to the Canadian literary canon for women writers that gave voice to the working-class, I was met with a gaping silence. Except for Gabrielle Roy, I was hard-pressed to find women writers telling working-class stories. I was determined to fill this space with the voices of strong, working-class women. My poetry and my fiction have drawn upon my working-class roots and focused on women’s ability to persevere through adversity and poverty. Certainly, the women in my family were strong examples for me—they helped my family push through some tough times financially and personally.My Santa Rosa Trilogy of novels (Broke City, North East, and Santa Rosa published by NeWest Press) chronicles the story of a working-class family, living in a long-disappeared working-class neighbourhood, and speaking a working-class vernacular. What is most important to me, however, is this family’s story is told through the eyes of a female child-narrator. This feminist perspective, this female gaze is critical to Christine’s dreams of becoming a writer, an artist. She believes her dreams will give her access to a different world and take her beyond the harsh reality of her home, her neighbourhood, and her city. Christine is a feminist without even being able to articulate it. Her voice and the voices of all future feminist characters in Canadian literature who tell their stories are essential to continue to make space for feminist writing in a traditional male-centric canon.Now, all these years later, when I look at the girl on the cover of my first book my mother bought for me, I realize that the very thought that I might become a writer was in itself a feminist act. Writers like me can tell the stories of girls like me, girls from working-class families who hear the particular sound of working-class voices—and writers like me can make them heard.* * *
Wendy McGrath is a Métis writer who has published four novels and two books of poetry. McGrath works in multiple genres—fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction, and spoken word. Her most recent book, Broke City, is the final novel in her prairie-gothic Santa Rosa Trilogy. This acclaimed trilogy chronicles the struggles of a working-class family and is told through the eyes of a child narrator. McGrath is also a printmaker and creator of artist books.Tagged: