Stan Persky

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Stan Persky (born 19 January 1941) is a Canadian writer, media commentator and philosophy instructor.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Persky was born in Chicago, Illinois. As a teenager, he made contact with and received encouragement from Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and other writers of the Beat Generation. Persky served in the United States Navy, and then settled in San Francisco, California in the early 1960s, becoming part of a group of writers that included Jack Spicer, Robert Duncan, Robin Blaser and George Stanley.

[edit] Life during university

In 1966, Persky moved to Vancouver, Canada, and attended the University of British Columbia, receiving degrees in anthropology and sociology. He studied with anthropologist Michael Kew, political philosopher Bob Rowan, and sociologist Roy Turner, and briefly studied as a graduate student with Rowan's teacher, political philosopher Joseph Tussman in the Experimental Program at the University of California, Berkeley. He became a Canadian citizen in 1972. During the 1960s and '70s, he was prominent as a student and civic activist, was an early staff member of the Georgia Straight, a free alternative newspaper, and co-founder with Dennis Wheeler of the "Georgia Straight Writing Supplement," which eventually became New Star Books.

[edit] Career after university

After university, Persky worked at Vancouver Mental Patients Association and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation before becoming a college instructor in the sociology department at Northwest College in Terrace, British Columbia. He subsequently taught at Malaspina College in Nanaimo, British Columbia and Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. Since 1983, he has worked primarily at Capilano College in North Vancouver, first in political studies and then in philosophy. Since 1990, in addition to living in Vancouver, he has resided part-time in Berlin, Germany.

He worked as a media commentator for the CBC, a literary columnist for The Globe and Mail and The Vancouver Sun, and has written for The Body Politic, This Magazine, New Directions, Saturday Night, Sodomite Invasion Review, Books in Canada and most recently www.dooneyscafe.com, and The Tyee.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Lives of the French Symbolist Poets (San Francisco: White Rabbit Press, 1967)
  • Wrestling the Angel (Vancouver: Talonbooks, 1977)
  • Son of Socred (Vancouver: New Star, 1979)
  • The House That Jack Built (Vancouver: New Star, 1980)
  • At the Lenin Shipyard: Poland and the Rise of the Solidarity Trade Union (Vancouver: New Star, 1981)
  • The Solidarity Sourcebook (Vancouver: New Star, 1982; edited with Henry Flam)
  • Flaunting It: A Decade of Gay Journalism from The Body Politic (Vancouver: New Star,1982; edited with Ed Jackson)
  • Bennett II (Vancouver: New Star, 1983)
  • America, the Last Domino: U.S. Foreign Policy in Central America Under Reagan (Vancouver, New Star, 1984)
  • The Supreme Court of Canada Decision on Abortion (Vancouver: New Star, 1988; edited with Shelagh Day)
  • Fantasy Government: Bill Vander Zalm and the Future of Social Credit (Vancouver: New Star, 1989)
  • Buddy's: Meditations on Desire (Vancouver: New Star, 1989; 1991)
  • Mixed Media, Mixed Messages (Vancouver: New Star, 1991)
  • Then We Take Berlin: Stories from the Other Side of Europe (Toronto: Knopf Canada, 1995; Toronto: Vintage Canada, 1996); U.S. title: Boyopolis: Sex And Politics In Gay Eastern Europe (Woodstock, N.Y.: Overlook, 1996))
  • Autobiography of a Tattoo (Vancouver: New Star, 1997)
  • Delgamuukw: The Supreme Court of Canada Decision on Aboriginal Title (Vancouver: David Suzuki Foundation and Greystone, 1998; edited with commentary)
  • On Kiddie Porn: Sexual Representation, Free Speech and the Robin Sharpe Case (Vancouver: New Star,2001; with John Dixon);
  • The Short Version: An ABC Book (Vancouver: New Star, 2005)
  • Topic Sentence: A Writer's Education (Vancouver: New Star, 2007)

[edit] Awards