Graeme Gibson, a beautiful, inspirational man, died in London recently. There is a nice appreciation of him in The Guardian, as well as many Canadian sources.
In June 2013 I interviewed Graeme Gibson and Margaret Atwood (both of whom I knew -- professionally, you might say, and mostly through the Writers' Union of Canada) as part of an oral history project on the founding of the Union. The following is an excerpt from that interview, previously published in a 2015 Writers' Union publication, Founding the Writers' Union: An Oral History.[1]
What we really were concerned about in the one
fundamental area was -- how best to say? -- managing the professionalism.
Managing how writers were being treated by publishers, by government, and
establishing a sense of authority for the profession.
Jim Lorimer, who was with the Canadian Publishers’ Association — as
compared to the branch plants bunch -- got onto this very quickly. He started
this rebellion, and a bunch of us decided we had to have a protest. [Jim made a
poster that] depicts the Egerton Ryerson statue outside of Ryerson University,
at that time called Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. I was teaching there at
that point, and Jim and I and others decided it would be a good idea if we had
a mournful celebration of what had happened to Ryerson Press around that
statue. So I got permission from the principal or the director of Ryerson — he
didn’t know what he was getting into. And what we did there is we had a big
American flag and a ladder, and we called the press in, and to our astonishment
they all turned up – cameras, all kinds of things. I climbed up the ladder and
draped the American flag around the statue of Egerton Ryerson, and we all sang
‘I’m a Yankee Doodle Dandy.’ The press covered it extensively. And we all rushed home and watched ourselves
on television.









