- Jaiotza
- Lekua
Jacques Godbout
Jacques Godbout, OC, CQ (born November 27, 1933) is a Canadian novelist, essayist, children's writer, journalist, filmmaker and poet. By his own admission a bit of a dabbler (touche-à-tout), Godbout has become one of the most important writers of his generation, with a major influence on post-1960 Quebec intellectual life.
Born in Montreal, Quebec, after studies at Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf and the Université de Montréal, Godbout taught French in Ethiopia before joining the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) as producer and scriptwriter in 1958.
He was active during Quebec's Quiet Revolution during which time he wrote a number of penetrating essays, the most important of which were collected in Le Réformiste (1975) and Le Murmure marchand (1984).
Godbout was a co-founder of Liberté (1959), the Mouvement laïque de la langue française (1962) and the Union des écrivains Québécois (1977). Godbout's films include four full-length features and more than 15 documentaries. He has also written nine novels for adults and two for children. Godbout currently writes a monthly column in the Quebec newsmagazine L'actualité.
Godbout lives in Outremont, a former city now in Montreal. He is the grand-nephew of former Quebec Premier Adélard Godbout.
Godbout's novel Une histoire américaine (1986) was chosen for inclusion in the French version of Canada Reads, broadcast on Radio-Canada in 2004, where it was championed by trade-union activist and professor Gérald Larose.
Zuzendari gisa
Les héritiers du mouton noir
Anne Hébert, 1916-2000
Traître ou patriote
Le sort de l'Amérique
L'affaire Norman William
Le Mouton noir
Pour l'amour du stress
Alias Will James
En dernier recours
Un monologue Nord-Sud
Feu l'objectivité
Deux épisodes dans la vie d'Hubert Aquin
Derrière l'image
La gammick
Les « troubbes » de Johnny
IXE-13
Kid Sentiment
Vivre sa ville
YUL 871
Huit témoins
Fabienne sans son Jules
People Might Laugh at Us
Rose et Landry
Strangers for the Day
Paul-Émile Borduas (1905-1960)
Comme en Californie