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They can dismiss you and put you off in a corner: "Oh, he's gay," and that's it. That's the end. You can no longer be central to what's going on. That's tragic. ... The world loses central contact with some of the most beautiful, sentient, sensitive and agitated, creative and emotional people in our society. The result is that a lot of people who operate centrally in our society can't let on that they're gay. It's tragic. It's very dangerous."
379:; McConnell separately travelled to Mexico, of his own accord, when he learned of Symons' whereabouts. Regardless, McConnell's parents posted a reward for Symons' arrest, putting police forces in Canada, the United States and Mexico on his trail, although the reward and arrest warrant were rescinded after McConnell contacted his family and threatened to commit
172:. He also first came to realize that he was gay, falling in love with a fellow student but repressing his feelings in sport. Symons would later describe the experience as emotionally crippling, leaving him an "eternal thirteen; eternally the boy reaching out to touch but never being allowed to do so… except as Mommy and Authority permitted."
656:
homosexual. Nobody could doubt my credentials. But I think, politically, we allowed this word gay to. ... It buggers up a nice word. It doesn't cover what we are. A lot of us are not very joyous. We have a hard life to live, against the current. Gay doesn't cover that—and worst of all, it labels us.
362:
Around this time, Symons left his wife and entered his first long-term relationship with another man, a 17-year-old student named John McConnell. This relationship led to an incident which came to define public awareness of Symons; while media reports claimed that Symons had "run off to Mexico with
131:
which dealt directly with homosexuality, two years before gay sex was decriminalized in Canada. He was an avid diarist, and many of his observations and episodes from his life found their way into his novels. His writing style was marked by experimental forms and structures, with one of his novels
561:
He was in a relationship with Aaron
Klokeid for much of his time living in Morocco; despite this, he strongly identified with the subversive "outlaw" aspects of homosexuality and disliked the increasing normalization and acceptance of gay people. He had little interest in participating in the
351:, hand-decorated by Symons and then packaged in a blue box which was wrapped in white ribbon and emblazoned with a wax seal, with the title stamped on the box in silver ink. (Due to its unique format, the novel was published only as a limited edition, and was not widely available until
306:
about Andrew, a character who himself fit the same profile as both Symons and
Anderson. The writing was liberally peppered with sexualized puns such as "fingertits", "cocktit" and "assoul". The novel did not garner favourable reviews upon its publication in 1967; writing in the
402:
Judith, often insisting that he still loved her and wanted to stay married to her even if his actual conduct suggested otherwise. By this point, Symons was also virtually estranged from his own birth family, some of whom never saw him again until he was near death.
533:: "I gave up everything so, first of all, I could feel, and in feeling, I could see, and in seeing, with some inner exploration, I could express...You have to risk. Sometimes I risk to the point of an anarchy, but I risk." Although purportedly the first book of a
347:. The novel was noted for its unconventional form—a series of polemical letters addressed to "Dear Reader"—and presentation; 848 pages in length, it was neither typeset nor bound, but rather the original handwritten manuscript was duplicated by
297:
elements; its protagonist Hugh
Anderson was, like Symons, a wealthy but socially alienated man from Toronto abandoning his comfortable bourgeois life to hole up in a hotel in Montreal, rediscovering himself in sex with male prostitutes in
317:
deemed
Anderson as "the most repellent single figure in the recent history of Canadian writing", and criticized Symons, whom he called "the monster from Toronto", for being incapable of writing about love. Despite the criticism, however,
578:. Despite his frequent opposition to conventional sexual values, however, he often railed against the decline of Canada's British and French cultural traditions; he was especially outraged by Canada dropping the
229:, whom Symons would later describe as having reawoken his dormant sexuality. Symons and his wife returned to Canada the following year with their newborn son Graham after Symons accepted a job with
355:
reissued it as a conventional paperback in 2007.) Once the project had been completed, Symons took a copy of the novel and placed it in the collection plate at his parents' church, Toronto's
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183:, where he earned a bachelor's degree in modern history as well as enlisting as a naval cadet and serving on the student government. He subsequently pursued graduate studies at
1161:
558:. Having published relatively little new writing since leaving Canada, however, he spent most of his time in Morocco relying primarily on financial support from Taylor.
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With the nomadic restlessness that would characterize much of his life, however, he soon quit journalism and returned to
Toronto, taking a job as a curator at the
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centred on York
Mackenzie, a Canadian man fleeing to Morocco after the breakup of his relationship with a younger man. The novel had been sent to
254:; within a few years, he was also an assistant professor of fine art at the University of Toronto, and briefly held a visiting curatorship at the
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639:. In declining health and with his financial support having dried up after Taylor's death, he returned to Toronto permanently in 2000.
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414:, Symons conceptualized it as a "furniture novel", deliberately blurring the lines between fiction and non-fiction by incorporating a
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During this period he began to write but never finished a book on
Canadian history and a stage play, and botched an audition to host
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being published as handwritten pages packaged in a box, and by a blurring of the lines between fiction and non-fiction.
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One night while practicing in the gymnasium, he fell off the high bar and broke his back, and was immobilized in a
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ever published in Canada, as well as a personal life that was often plagued by scandal and interpersonal conflict.
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Still attempting to repress his sexuality, Symons married Judith Morrow, the granddaughter of a president of the
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won the Beta Sigma Phi First
Canadian Novel Award. Its critical reception has improved over time; in 2005, the
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464:(Vol. 11, No. 3). The review digressed to criticize many of the era's Canadian literary figures, including
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In 1977, he published "The
Canadian Bestiary: Ongoing Literary Depravity", a scathing review of
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He eventually moved into a nursing home, and died there in 2009 at the age of 75. Along with
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an underage boy", in reality Symons had travelled to Mexico to attend an artists' retreat in
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1258:"'Encounters with Authors: Essays on Scott Symons, Robin Hardy, Norman Elder' by Ian Young"
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208:, but was soon fired for not being deferential to his bosses; he then took a job with the
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if Symons were jailed. Symons and McConnell then spent some time living in northern
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for a series of articles about the early stirrings of what would become Quebec's
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editor David Warren characterized Symons as a "violent Tory of the old school".
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under the title "Canada: A Loving Look". He was also a regular contributor to
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and holed up in a small hotel in
Montreal for 21 days, during which he wrote
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Encounters with Authors: Essays on Scott Symons, Robin Hardy, Norman Elder
652:, Symons articulated his philosophy of sexual identity: "I am certainly a
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for editing several years before it was published. Upon the release of
511:, was published in 1986. Semi-autobiographical like his earlier works,
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as one of the 100 most important books in Canadian literary history.
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for several months. After completing high school, he enrolled at the
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Christopher Elson, "Introduction: Siting La Place" in Scott Symons,
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at a time when this was very difficult, publishing his first novel,
635:, an anthology of his published and unpublished writings edited by
236:
101:(July 13, 1933 – February 23, 2009), known professionally as
534:
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rather than with McConnell, who had been sent by his parents to
1201:, "Author sad that many have robbed themselves of inner life".
523:, Symons described his guiding philosophy in an interview with
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People associated with Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library
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even though he was neither francophone nor Roman Catholic.
980:, "A Whiff of the Monster: Encounters with Scott Symons".
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Symons returned to Toronto in 1986 for the publication of
105:, was a Canadian writer. He was most noted for his novels
124:
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Pink Snow: Homotextual Possibilities in Canadian Fiction
156:. A rebellious teenager, he was sent by his parents to
860:"His life was his art. Alas, it was not a masterpiece"
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and established a lifelong friendship with journalist
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Heritage: A Romantic Look at Early Canadian Furniture
408:
Heritage: A Romantic Look at Early Canadian Furniture
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Symons and his wife spent some time studying at the
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Working the Dead Beat: 50 Lives That Changed Canada
202:He briefly took a job on the editorial page of the
1218:"Scott Symons blew the hinges off the closet door"
572:decriminalizing homosexuality in his 1968 revision
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398:Despite this, Symons was hurt by the process of
406:In 1971, Symons published the non-fiction book
1081:"Uncivil Elegies: The Mystery of Civic Square"
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660:He published a few journalism pieces in the
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433:By 1973, Symons had left Canada to live in
258:and a research associate's position at the
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425:He and McConnell broke up soon afterward.
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666:and worked on an unpublished novella,
566:movement, and even harshly criticized
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693:, he was the subject of a chapter in
1042:"Scott Symons, novelist, dies at 75"
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882:Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada
871:
544:In 1990, he published two essays in
293:contained both autobiographical and
194:, in 1958. Taylor was his best man.
148:, the son of businessman and writer
1301:Alumni of King's College, Cambridge
612:column after Symons' death, former
602:—as "a Finishing School System for
428:
279:In 1965 he fled the family farm in
13:
1391:20th-century Canadian LGBTQ people
1381:20th-century Canadian male writers
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777:Dear Reader: Selected Scott Symons
633:Dear Reader: Selected Scott Symons
192:Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
14:
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600:Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
1014:Combat Journal for Place d'Armes
923:, Broadview Press, p. 114,
490:Six Journeys: a Canadian Pattern
1376:20th-century Canadian novelists
1371:20th-century Canadian essayists
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984:. Toronto: Sykes Press, 2013.
670:. Both of his earlier novels,
339:, a novel whose working title
302:, and in turn writing his own
1:
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1291:University of Toronto alumni
648:during his visit to promote
449:, published that same year.
335:He followed up in 1969 with
152:and the brother of academic
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886:University of Toronto Press
507:His third and final novel,
113:, among the first works of
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1346:Canadian LGBTQ journalists
1296:University of Paris alumni
1262:Lambda Literary Foundation
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211:Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph
1341:Canadian literary critics
1336:Canadian magazine writers
1331:Canadian male journalists
1159:"Tribute to a contrarian"
1065:Literary Review of Canada
751:featuring photographs by
447:Eleven Canadian Novelists
393:Newfoundland and Labrador
325:Literary Review of Canada
99:Hugh Brennan Scott Symons
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32:Hugh Brennan Scott Symons
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1351:Journalists from Toronto
1321:Canadian LGBTQ novelists
1068:, January/February 2006.
1060:"The LRC 100 (Part One)"
537:, no follow-up books to
268:This Hour Has Seven Days
241:National Newspaper Award
239:. While there, he won a
216:St-Jean-Baptiste Society
1366:Canadian male essayists
1306:Canadian male novelists
982:Encounters with Authors
418:aspect which verged on
343:was nixed by publisher
256:Smithsonian Institution
1361:Novelists from Toronto
1248:, June 1986. p. 24–27.
919:Goldie, Terry (2003),
158:Trinity College School
1386:20th-century diarists
1242:"Monstrous visions".
727:(1969; reissued 2007
713:(1967; reissued 2010
642:In an interview with
541:have been published.
365:San Miguel de Allende
181:University of Toronto
1311:Canadian gay writers
1183:"Emotional states".
1174:, February 25, 2009.
1050:, February 23, 2009.
868:, February 27, 2009.
596:Parliament of Canada
445:'s non-fiction work
341:The Smugly Fucklings
304:novel within a novel
252:Royal Ontario Museum
185:Cambridge University
70:Novelist, journalist
1120:, December 2, 1971.
682:in the late 2000s.
678:, were reissued by
580:Canadian Red Ensign
357:St. James Cathedral
164:, where he took up
1264:, August 26, 2013.
1223:2009-03-27 at the
1204:The Globe and Mail
1186:The Globe and Mail
1164:2014-05-16 at the
1117:The Globe and Mail
1114:"O walnut flesh".
1102:The Globe and Mail
1047:The Globe and Mail
865:The Globe and Mail
530:The Globe and Mail
495:The Globe and Mail
1356:Canadian curators
1316:Canadian diarists
1233:, March 12, 2009.
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1087:, March 14, 2006.
990:978-0-9695286-2-3
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791:Christopher Elson
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1286:2009 deaths
1281:1933 births
687:Robin Hardy
629:Nik Sheehan
389:Trout River
369:York Wilson
78:1960s–1990s
1275:Categories
894:0802007619
798:References
785:1896356184
771:0452262275
747:0771083777
733:0889242984
719:1554884578
625:God's Fool
517:Dennis Lee
166:gymnastics
136:Early life
67:Occupation
58:2009-02-24
38:1933-07-13
978:Ian Young
878:W. H. New
695:Ian Young
606:". In an
604:Wesleyans
547:The Idler
456:'s novel
435:Essaouira
416:narrative
400:divorcing
349:Gestetner
281:Claremont
232:La Presse
177:body cast
162:Port Hope
1221:Archived
1162:Archived
1137:, 2012.
1020:, 2010.
888:, 2002.
598:and the
237:Montreal
223:Sorbonne
46:, Canada
779:(1998,
765:(1986,
741:(1971,
654:devoted
574:of the
535:trilogy
439:Morocco
381:suicide
275:Writing
146:Ontario
142:Toronto
120:He was
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614:Idler
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367:with
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29:Born
235:in
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