Tania Langlais
Tania Langlais (born 1979) is a Quebec poet and educator.[1]
She was born in Montreal and was educated at the Université du Québec à Montréal. Langlais teaches French at the college level.[1]
Her work has appeared in a number of anthologies. Langlais received the Prix Émile-Nelligan in 2000 for her collection of poetry Douze bêtes aux chemises de l’homme, the youngest to receive this award. She has also received the Prix Jacqueline-Déry-Mochon in 2001, the first prize for poetry from Radio-Canada in 2002 and the Prix Joseph-S. Stauffer in 2005.[1] She was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for French-language poetry in 2001,[2] in 2007[3] and in 2014.[4]
Works[1]
- La clarté s'installe comme un chat (2004)
- Kennedy sait de quoi je parle (2008)
gollark: ```pythondef transform(data, ops=None): """ transform """ if ops is None: ops = [] for op in ops: data = op(data) if data is None: return None return data```
gollark: Apparently this machine library has reinvented function composition somewhere within its data preprocessing pipelines>
gollark: I AM installing scikit_image, unlike certain beeoids.
gollark: It is already too late.
gollark: No you can't.
References
- "Langlais, Tania". Infocentre littéraire des écrivains.
- "The kindest cut of all: The G-G's shortlist". Globe and Mail. October 24, 2001.
- "The Canada Council for the Arts Announces Finalists for the 2007 Governor General's Literary Awards". Marketwired.
- "The 2014 GG shortlist is here". Canada Council for the Arts.
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