Mayne, Seymour, 1944- : Seymour Mayne, poet, editor, translator, was born in Montreal on 18 May 1944 and began writing poetry at an early age. His poems appeared in several Canadian magazines before he was twenty years old. He studied English at McGill University and founded 'Cataract', a little magazine, in 1961 with K.V. Hertz, Leonard Angel and Henry Moscovitch, young poets under the influence of Irving Layton and Leonard Cohen. During his McGill years, he edited 'The Page', a broadside of student poetry, and 'Catapult', the successor to 'Cataract'. In addition, he wrote and published two chapbooks of poems: 'That Monocycle the moon' (Montreal: self-published, 1964) and 'Tiptoeing on the mount' (Montreal: McGill Poetry Series, 1965).
He went to the University of British Columbia in 1965 to do his graduate studies and received his Master of Arts degree in 1966. In that year, he founded Very Stone House Press in Vancouver with Patrick Lane, bill bissett and Jim Brown, and it published his third book of poems, 'From the portals of mouseholes'. His fourth book, 'Manimals, a comic diversion', appeared in 1969 from Very Stone House as did a number of his broadsides and experiments in concrete poetry. He continued to write more serious poems, a volume of which, 'Mouth' (Kingston: Quarry Press, 1970), appeared the following year.
Very Stone House ceased operations in 1970 and in its place Mayne created Ingluvin Publications with K.V. Hertz. For one of its first projects, he assisted Dorothy Livesay with the editing of the anthology '40 Women poets of Canada' (Montreal: Ingluvin, 1971). During this period, he also edited 'Engagements: The Prose of Irving Layton' (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1972) and wrote his PhD thesis on the poetry of Irving Layton.
After producing several volumes of poetry and prose and two issues of its little magazine, Ingluvin collapsed in 1973. Mayne, who in the meantime had graduated, returned to eastern Canada that year and took up a teaching position at the University of Ottawa. He created a new venture, Valley Editions (which soon joined with Mosaic Press of Oakville), to complete the projects left unfinished by Ingluvin, and continued to write poetry.
'Name' (Erin, Ont.: Porcépic Press, 1975) won the J.I. Segal Prize for English-French literature and the York University Poetry Workshop Award. It was followed by 'Diasporas' (Oakville: Mosaic Press/Valley Editions, 1977),'The Impossible promised land: poems new and selected' (Oakville: Mosaic Press/Valley Editions, 1981),'Children of Abel' (Oakville: Mosaic Press, 1986), and 'Killing time' (Oakville: Mosaic Press, 1992), which won the Jewish Book Committee Prize. Three volumes of his poems have been translated into Hebrew and published in Israel.
In addition to writing and publishing, Mayne has been a prolific translator of poetry from the Polish, Yiddish, and Hebrew. He has translated or co-translated works by Jerzy Harasymowicz, Abraham Sutzkever, Rachel Korn, Moshe Dor, Shlomo Vinner, and Melech Ravitch. He won an American Literary Translators Association Award in 1990 for his translations from the Yiddish.
He has also been active in the academic field, editing or co-editing two volumes of Irving Layton's poetry, 'A Wild peculiar joy' (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1982) and 'Selected poems', 1945-89 (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1989); a volume of criticism, 'Irving Layton: the poet and his critics' (Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1978); and two anthologies of Jewish Canadian poetry, 'Essential words' (Ottawa: Oberon Press, 1985) and 'Jerusalem' (Montreal: Vehicule Press, 1996). From 1974 to 1981 he was an editor of the literary journal 'Jewish dialog' and since 1991 he has been on the editorial board of 'Parchment', an annual of contemporary Jewish writing.