Albert Laberge Explained

Albert Laberge (1871-1960) was a Québécois author and journalist.

Early life

Albert Laberge was born on 18 February 1871 in Beauharnois, Quebec, to Pierre Laberge and Marie-Joséphine Boursier. He went to the Académie Saint-Clément before attending Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal.[1] After studying law in 1894, he began working at the newspaper, La Presse, in 1896, and worked as a journalist there until 1932.

Career

In 1918, Laberge published La Scouine (fr), which was censured by clergy for its portrayal of traditional Québécois themes.[2] Other than newspaper articles, he would go on to publish collections of stories, prose-poems, essays, some literary criticism, as well as an unfinished autobiographical novel.

Laberge was also an art collector and critic. He died in 1960.

Selected publications

External links

Albert Laberge fonds at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Albert Laberge The Canadian Encyclopedia. 2021-05-14. www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca.
  2. The Unique, Its Double and the Multiple: The Carnivalesque Hero in the Québécois Novel. 2021-05-14. Yale French Studies. 141. 2930043. en. Hajdukowski-Ahmed. Maroussia. Marta. Jan. 1983. 65. 10.2307/2930043 .