
PhD, Comparative Literature; Toronto
MA, Toronto
MA, Freiburg
Email: wsiemerl@uwaterloo.ca
Biography
Winfried Siemerling is a University Research Chair and Professor of English at the University of À¶ĘźÊÓÆ”, and an Associate of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute at Harvard University. He won the Gabrielle Roy Prize for The Black Atlantic Reconsidered: Black Canadian Writing, Cultural History, and the Presence of the Past (2015; ; French translation 2022).
Siemerling earned an M.A. in English and Romance Literatures and Languages from the University of Freiburg and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Toronto. Trained in Canadian/QuĂ©bĂ©cois and North American comparative literature, he turned his attention especially to cultural emergence, decolonization and race, issues of alterity and recognition, and environmental concerns and the Anthropocene.Â
Siemerling was a Harvard postdoctoral fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies and repeatedly a Visiting Professor at the John F. Kennedy Institute of the Freie UniversitĂ€t Berlin. Before joining the University of À¶ĘźÊÓÆ” in 2010, he served as Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the Université de Sherbrooke, where he was for many years Director of Graduate Studies in Comparative Literature. He was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 2019.
Selected Publications
Books
. McGill-Queenâs UP, 2015. French translation; Les Ă©critures noires du Canada: LâAtlantique noir et la prĂ©sence du passĂ©. Trans. Patricia Godbout, timeline updated by Jean Philippe Mongeau. U of Ottawa P, 2022.
. Ed. Winfried Siemerling and Sarah Phillips Casteel. McGill-Queenâs UP, 2010.
. New York and London: Routledge, 2005. Grand Prix du Livre 2006 de la Ville de Sherbrooke. French translation: , Trans. Patricia Godbout. Les Presses de lâUniversitĂ© Laval, 2010.
Bibliography of Comparative Studies in Canadian, QuĂ©bec, and Foreign Literatures/Bibliographie dâ Ă©tudes comparĂ©es des littĂ©ratures canadienne, quĂ©bĂ©coise et Ă©trangĂšres 1930-1995. By Antoine Sirois, Pamela Grant, David Hayne, Gregory Reid, Winfried Siemerling, and Maria van Sundert. Sherbrooke: Editions GGC, May 2001.
. Ed. Winfried Siemerling and Katrin Schwenk. Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1996/1997 (Hardcover/Paperback).
. Ed. Winfried Siemerling. Toronto: ECW Press, 1996.
. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994. Reissued as electronic edition by University of Toronto Press, 2008.
Artificial Intelligence in the Humanities: A Practical Introduction to DĂ©redec. Toronto: Department of French, University of Toronto/Toronto: Canadian Scholarsâ Press, 1989.
Articles & Chapters
âRĂ©inventer lâavenir : le pouvoir de transformation de quelques textes de la littĂ©rature noire du QuĂ©bec et du Canada.â Trans. Patricia Godbout. Cahiers Anne-HĂ©bert 19 (2024): 72-84.Â
âFascination and Liminality in Michael Ondaatjeâs Coming Through Slaughter.â Do You Want to Be Happy and Write? Critical Essays on Michael Ondaatje. Ed. Robert Lecker. McGill-Queenâs UP 2023. 247-62.
âJazz, Diaspora, and the History and Writing of Black Anglophone Montreal.â Unsettling the Great White North: Black Canadian History. Ed Michele Johnson and Funké Aledejebi. U of Toronto P, 2022. 488-510. Earlier version in Critical Collaborations: Indigeneity, Diaspora, and Ecology in Canadian Literary Studies. Ed. Smaro Kamboureli and Christl Verduyn. Wilfrid Laurier UP 2014. 199-214.
âFrom Site/Sight to Sound and Film: Critical Black Canadian Memory Culture and Sylvia D. Hamiltonâs The Little Black School House.â Harrietâs Daughters: Race, Historical Memories, and Futures in Canada. Ed. Ronald Cummings and Natalee Caple. McGill-Queenâs UP. 2022: 226-42. Rpt. from Studies in Canadian Literature 44.1(June 2019): 30-46.Â
âBlack Activism, Print Culture, and Literature in Canada, 1850-65.â African American Literature in Transition, gen. ed. Joycelyn Moody, Vol IV (1850-65), ed. Teresa Zackodnik. Cambridge UP, 2021. 271- 306.
âRe/cognizing the Time-Spaces of the Black Atlantic: A Response.â âForum on Winfried Siemerling, The Black Atlantic Reconsidered.â Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry 8.1 (2021): 114-20.
âAccumulated Time, the Anecdote, and the Vertical Imagination.â Exemplary Singularity: Fault Lines of the Anecdotal. Ed. MaryAnn Snyder-Körber, Florian Sedlmeier, Birte Wege, andJames Dorson. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2021. 181-98.
â.â The A-Line: A Journal of Progressive Thought 2.4 (November 22, 2020).Â
"Austin Clarke: âMembering Home and the Black Atlantic.â Revista Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses 78 (2019): 75-81.
âSocial Aesthetics and Transcultural Improvisation: Wayde Compton and the Performance of Black Time.â Improvisation and Social Aesthetics.  Ed. Georgina Born, Eric Lewis, and Will Straw. Duke UP, 2017. 255-67.
âTransnational Perspectives on the Americas: Canada, the United States, and the Case of Mary Ann Shadd.â Routledge Companion to Inter-American Studies. Ed. Wilfried Raussert. New York: Routledge, 2017. 31-44.Â
âNew Ecologies of the Real: Nonsimultaneity and Canadian Literature(s).â Studies in Canadian Literature 41.1 (2016). 125-42.
 âHistory and the Truth of Fiction: Lawrence Hill.â Ten Canadian Writers in Context: Reading Canadian Literature Today / Dix sur dix: Lire la littĂ©rature canadienne aujourdâhui. Ed. Marie CarriĂšre, Peter Midgley, and Jason Purcell. Edmonton: University of Alberta P and Canadian Literature Centre, 2016. 95-101.
âSlave Narratives and Hemispheric Studies.â The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative. Ed. John Ernest. Oxford UP, 2014. 344-61.
"A Conversation with Lawrence Hill." Callaloo 36.1 (2013): 5-26.
âTime-Spaces of the Black Atlantic: Yemaya, Diasporic Disruption, and Connection in Dionne Brand.â Special Issue on Dionne Brand, ČŃČč°äŽÇłŸĂš°ù±đ 14:1-2 (2013): 12-42.
"Canadian Literatures and the Postcolonial." The Cambridge History of Postcolonial Literature. Ed. Ato Quayson. Cambridge UP, 2012. Volume I: 171-214.
« Mary Ann Shadd, la diaspora africaine et les AmĂ©riques ». Trans, Multi, InterculturalitĂ©, Trans, Multi, InterdisciplinaritĂ©. Ed. Brigitte Fontille and Patrick Imbert. Trans. Sonya Malaborza. QuĂ©bec: Les Presses de lâUniversitĂ© Laval, 2012. 165-77.
"Voicing the Unforeseeable: Improvisation, Social Practice, Collaborative Research." By Winfried Siemerling and Ajay Heble. Cross-Talk. Ed. Diana Brydon and Marta Dvorak.Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2012. 39-51.
âAfrican Canadian Writing at the Crossroads of Space and Time: Lawrence Hill and Wayde Compton.â Riding/Writing across Borders in North American Travelogues and Fiction. Ed. Waldemar Zacharasiewicz. Vienna: Verlag der Ăsterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2011. 185-99.
âCanadian Literatures, Language, Race.â Canadian Literature 204 (Spring 2010): 150-2.
ââ The Canadian Encyclopedia. Posted April 2010.
âTranscultural Improvisation, Transnational Time, and Diasporic Chance in Wayde Comptonâs Textual Performance.â West Coast Line 63 (March 2010). 30-37.
âCanadian Literature, Transnational Studies, Race.âTransplanter le Canada: Semailles / Transplanting Canada: Seedlings. Eds. Marie Carriere and Jerry White. Canadian Literature Center Studies / Cahiers du CLC 1. Edmonton: Canadian Literature Centre, 2010. 8-19.
âBi-Culturalism, Multiculturalism, Transculturalism: Canada and Quebec." Special Issue on âCulturalism.â New Literature Review (Australia) 45/46 (2009): 133-56.
âNarratives of Cultural Emergence, Re/Cognition, and the Study of North America.â American Studies/ Shifting Gears. Ed. Michael Butter Christ, Christian Kloeckner, Elisabeth Schafer-Wunsche, and Michael Butter. Heidelberg, Germany: Winter Verlag, 2010. 143-75.
âWriting the Black Canadian City at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century: Dionne Brandâs Toronto and Mairuth Sarsfieldâs Montreal.â Etudes Canadiennes/Canadian Studies (France) 64 (2008): 109-22.
With Sarah Casteel: âCanada and Its Americas: Transnational Navigations of the Literary.â Canada and the Americas: Multidisiplinary Perspectives on Transculturality. Ed. Afef Benessaie. Toronto: Antares, 2008. 69-78.
âEthics as Re/Cognition: Oral Knowledge, Cognitive Change, and Social Justice in the Novels of Marie-CĂ©lie Agnant.â Special Issue on Ethics and Literature, University of Toronto Quarterly 76:3 (2007): 838-60.
âTrans-Scan: Globalization, Literary Hemispheric Studies, Citizenship as Project.â Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of Canadian Literature. Ed. Smaro Kamboureli and Roy Miki. À¶ĘźÊÓÆ”: Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2007. 129-40.
âPostindian Re/Visions in Gerald Vizenorâs The Heirs of Columbus.â Discours dâexclusion et dâinclusion: dynamiques de la mondialisation dans les Ameriques. Ed. Patrick Imbert. Ottawa: Legas P, 2005. 167-79.
ââLightsâ: Oral History and the Writing of the Other in In the Skin of a Lion.â Michael Ondaatje. Ed. Steven Tötösy. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 2005. 92-103.
âMay I See Some Identification?: Race, Borders, and Identities in Any Known Blood. Canadian Literature 182 (2004): 30-50. Rpt. in Siemerling and Casteel, Canada and Its Americas, 148-70.
âFrom Narratives of Emergence to Transculture: Parti Pris and Vice Versa.â Meeting Global and Domestic Challenges: Canadian Federalism in Perspective. Ed. Thomas Greven and Heinz Ickstadt. Berlin: Kennedy-Institut Materalien, 2004. 125-41.
âComparative North American Literary History and Alterity: Bercovitch, Blodgett, and a Hermeneutics of Non-Transcendence.â Tendances actuelles en histoire littĂ©raire/ Contemporary Trends in Canadian Literary History. Ed. Denis St-Jacques and E.D. Blodgett. QuĂ©bec: Nota Bene, 2003. 27-51.
âThe Metropolis Project and Literary Studies: In/visible Cities?â Association of Canadian College and University Teachers of English Newsletter. Laurentian University, Sudbury: ACCUTE, 2002. 40-44.
âCultural Plurality and Canadian Literature.â Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. Ed. W.H. New. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2002. 265-71.
âMichael Ondaatje.â Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada, Ed. W.H. New. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2002. 845-48.
âInterkulturalitĂ€t in der Anglo- und Frankokanadischen Literatur.â With Peter Klaus. Anglo-Romanische Kulturkontakte vom Humanismus bis Postkolonialismus. Ed. Andrew James Johnston and Ulrike Schneider. Berlin: Dahlem UP, 2002. 246-79.
âW.E.B. Du Bois, Hegel, and the Staging of Alterity.â Callaloo: A Journal of African American and African Arts and Letters 24:1 (2001): 325-33.
âOther Canons: Margaret Atwood and the QuĂ©bĂ©cois Reception of English Canadian Literature.â Journal of Indo-Canadian Studies 1:1 (January 2001): 48-59.
âUnited States/Canadian Writersâ Perspectives on the Multiculturalism Debate: A Roundtable Discussion at Harvard University.â Ed. with Graham Huggan. Canadian Literature 164 (Spring 2000): 82-111.
âTelling Differences: Reading Canadaâs Literatures at the End of the Millennium.â Literary Review of Canada 8:3 (April 2000): 22-25 and 8:4 (May 2000): 24-26.
Sixteen further articles & chapters prior to 2000.
Fellowships and Awards
- 2019Â Elected to the Royal Society of Canada
- 2015 Gabrielle Roy Prize for Ìę(McGill-Queenâs UP, 2015).
- From 1996-2023, ten Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and one Formation de Chercheurs et l'Aide a la Rechercher (FCAR) (Quebec) individual or team grants
- 2012 and 2016 University of À¶ĘźÊÓÆ” Outstanding Performance Award
- 2009 - present Associate of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, Harvard University
- 2000, 2008, and 2019 Visiting Professor, John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Berlin
- 2000 - 2008 Fellow (non-resident), W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research, Harvard University
- 1994-2009 Professor, Université de Sherbrooke (Assistant Professor 1994-1997; Associate Professor 1997-2002)
- 1993-94 Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS/ Ford Foundation/ Mellon Foundation/ Fulbright) and Harvard University Visiting Scholar, Department of English
- 1991-93 Postdoctoral Fellow, John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Berlin
Current Research
2017-25 (Principal Investigator) âNonsimultaneity and Incomplete Time: From Bloch, Benjamin, and the Frankfurt School to Contemporary Black Critique.â Insight Development Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
2017-25 (Principal Investigator, team grant, with Karina Vernon, University of Toronto) âCall and Responsibility: The Transformative Appeal and Reception Aesthetics of Black Canadian Literature, Film, and Music.â Insight Grant, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
2013-22Ìę(Co-researcher) SSHRC Partnership Grant. "International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation: A Partnered Research Institute"
Areas of Graduate Supervision
- Canadian literature and culture, North American literatures and cultures
- Black North American writing (including francophone Quebec)
- Race and ethnicity
- Postcolonial studies
- Diaspora studies
- Hemispheric studies
- Literary and critical theory (including Frankfurt School)
- Jazz and literature
- The Anthropocene, Theory, Literature