
Margaret Laurence
Reconstructing Margaret
Laurence
by bruce haug
An interview with biographer James King
James King, a biographer and English professor at McMaster
University, has worked to reinvent the perception of one of the most
important figures in Canadian consciousness. In his new book, The Life of
Margaret Laurence, King uses everything from unpublished letters to
conversations with friends in order to unmask the real issues that
surrounded her life and death, and led her to the forefront of the
Canadian literary scene. Laurence, one of Canada's finest female authors, is best known
for her novels The Stone Angel, A Jest of God, The Fire-Dwellers, and The
Diviners. Throughout her life, Laurence had been lionized by the public
and revered by many as a predominant shaper of post-war Canadian
literature, setting the pace for other Canadian women like Margaret Atwood
and Alice Munro. Posthumously she has been widely honoured with gatherings
as well as being featured on a Canadian postage stamp. Although her life has been the subject of countless lectures
and literary critiques, both during her life and after her death, King's
biography is the first full-length treatment of her life as one of the
most beloved figures in Canada's cultural history. Since her death on January 5th, 1987, the official
understanding, as reported in newspapers, was that she "died of lung
cancer in her Lakefield, Ontario home." The few friends and family members
who knew of her death as a suicide, however, kept it a secret.
King says the biggest revelation about this book is not about
her suicide but about how much she suffered and how insecure she was. "I
think it shocks people that someone can be so famous yet so unhappy," he
tells me. A few weeks after King approached Laurence's children, Jocelyn,
45, and David, 42, with the idea of writing the biography, he was given
the green light to set the record straight about the real life of their
mother. The only condition was that they be allowed to check over the text
to guarantee its accuracy. From the beginning, he knew that there were
questions surrounding her living years with cancer and that there existed
a "mysterious diary." Through countless interviews with friends and
family--which took him from Vancouver to Penticton to Lakefield--he began
to discover someone else behind the public personae of Laurence. The woman
King found was a frail and tormented person who struggled to balance her
roles as writer, wife and mother. Not until well into his research did Jocelyn hand the diary
over to him. The journal contained, among other things, the details of
Laurence's suicide. "Although I had some ideas about what happened during
the years after she was diagnosed with cancer," says King, "I was still
quite flabbergasted with the news of her suicide." King does a great job of transforming the distance between her
public and private life into a story of sorrow and sacrifice. In chapter
15, he discusses the importance Laurence's writing had for her. "[It] was
the consistent way in which she had coped creatively with the losses she
had endured as a young child--it allowed her to mother herself. She could
not deal with the loss of her husband in the same way and...she sought the
comforts of alcoholic oblivion on a daily basis." King effectively uses her letters, her diary and other
resources as the maps necessary to re-evaluate the inner landscape that
made Laurence such a great writer. Aided by the extensive archive of
Laurence's manuscripts and letters at McMaster University, King proves
himself an excellent researcher. While the overall themes of the book are
given plenty of support, the relevance of some of the evidence used to
illustrate her conflicts does at times seem to be a bit of a stretch.
As an experienced biographer, King has explored the lives of
notable individuals such as poets William Cowper and William Blake, as
well as novelist Virginia Woolf. Although Laurence is the first Canadian
subject to be featured in one of his biographies (his next project will be
about the life of Canadian publisher Jack McClelland), there are many
recurrent themes common to his works. This may be one of the major reasons
that King was endorsed by the family to tell the life of Laurence.
Their concern, King says, was that they wanted a "biography
that would tell about the suicide but that would do it in the context of a
full account of her life." Based on his earlier books, certain themes he
used to explore the connection between an artist's life and their work
seemed applicable to Laurence's life story. The most explicit of these themes has to do with childhood loss
and the impact it had on the lives of those he has studied. Cowper, the
subject of King's first biography, was faced with the death of his mother
when he was a child. "This plagued him his whole life," says King. "It was
the root of his anguish." In his biography of Woolf, King also focuses on how her
mother's death marked both her literary and private life. As with Woolf
and Cowper, King takes a psychological approach in order to understand the
interplay between the life of Laurence and her novels. Orphaned when she
was young (her mother died when she was four and her father died when she
was nine) she was never able to remove herself from her childhood.
Keeping in mind King's predisposition to identify certain
moments in a person's life and to carry those motifs through the
biography, I wonder how differently Laurence's life would have been told
through the words of another writer. Is it possible to remove the
biographer from the biography? "We write out of our own experiences," King admits, and when
telling the story of someone's life, we make "judgments based on who we
are." Sandra Djwa, an English professor at Simon Fraser University agrees
that the biographer plays a role in the reconstruction of people's lives.
"Every literary construct is filtered through the perceiving consciousness
of the writer," Djwa explains. "In this sense, a biography is a literary
construct." The revelations of Laurence's suicide attempts and the degree
of her alcoholism will certainly have an impact on the way Canadians
perceive the author. Some people--friends of Laurence mostly--would have
preferred this information be suppressed. Fortunately, this was not an
option for King. "I couldn't have created a book which would have either
deliberately or intentionally whitewashed that information," he said.
King argues that only through a complete understanding of the
causes that shaped her actions and the impact they had on her novels is it
possible to know who Margaret Laurence was. "Knowing this new information
treasures what she was able to do and what she was able accomplish," King
explained, "and if I'm apart of that, I'm delighted."
Last Update: June 1, 2001
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