Douglas Coupland

From Includipedia, the inclusionist encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Douglas Coupland
Born Template:Birth date and age
CFB Baden-Söllingen, West Germany
Nationality Image:Flag of Canada.svg Canadian
Literary movement Postmodern
Debut works Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture
Influences Ernest Hemingway, Margaret Drabble, Truman Capote, Kurt Vonnegut, Joan Didion, Andy Warhol
Website Coupland.com


Douglas Coupland (born December 30, 1961) is a Canadian fiction writer as well as a playwright and visual artist. His first book, the 1991 novel Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture, was nominated for the Books in Canada First Novel Award, became an international bestseller and popularized the terms "McJob" and "Generation X". Much of Coupland's work explores the unexpected cultural shifts created by the impact of new technologies on middle class North American culture. Persistent themes include the conflict between secular and religious values, difficulty in aging and taking on adult roles, ironic attitudes as a response to intense media saturation, and pop and mass culture.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Coupland was born to Dr. Douglas Charles Thomas and C. Janet Coupland on a Royal Canadian Air Force base in Baden-Söllingen, West Germany. He was the third child of four sons. Coupland's family returned to Canada four years later, settling in West Vancouver, British Columbia, where he was raised. He lives in West Vancouver.

Coupland left Vancouver as a teenager to study physics at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. He stayed only one year before going back to Vancouver to study art at the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. Trained as a sculptor, Coupland worked and studied in Sapporo, Japan at the Hokkaido College of Art and Design and in Milan, Italy at the Instituto Europeo di Design.

In 1985/86, Coupland attended the Japan-America Institute of Management Science in Honolulu, Hawaii and Tokyo, Japan. He graduated with honours. In late 1986, he returned to Vancouver, where he began to write on popular culture for Vancouver Magazine and Western Living magazine. In 1988, he moved to Toronto to work on a now-defunct business magazine, Vista.

In 1989, Coupland severed his magazine connections and began writing fiction. His debut novel was Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture (published March 11, 1991 by St. Martin's Press). It was critically praised for capturing the zeitgeist of his peer group, for whom its title provided a convenient label. Although society later estimated "Generation X" as being born up to and including the early 1970s, Douglas' range was close enough to approximate the label. Without knowing it, he had provided one of the names for his whole generation. Consequently, Coupland starred in a series of MTV promos reading excerpts from his book, participating in a form of mutual validation.

Though his next novel, Shampoo Planet (1992) had a more conventional structure than its predecessor, there were similarities, including a detailed eye for the mores and minutiae of the lives of its young protagonists: (video games, hippie parents, and an obsession with consumer culture).

This novel was followed in 1994 by a collection of thematically linked short stories called Life After God.

Microserfs (1995) is centered on high-tech life in Seattle, Washington and Palo Alto, California, contrasting the corporate culture of Microsoft with pre-dot-com bubble start-up companies. Microserfs also reflected Coupland’s art school roots. Much of the book's page layout used bold and unusual typography and was grounded in Pop Art and Text Art, influenced by artists such as Andy Warhol and Jenny Holzer. Because of Coupland’s lack of roots in traditional literary academia, critics had a hard time locating the meaning and intent of the pages. A decade later, this use of typography is understood as a bridge between the art and literary worlds.

1997’s Girlfriend in a Coma (with a title from, and many knowing nods in the text to, The Smiths) showed Coupland’s willingness to tackle broader themes and featured some of his most mature writing. Poet and critic Tom Paulin described his use of language as "full of extraordinary imagery" and "fresh, like wet paint." Like the earlier novels, however, some critics disapproved of its experimental structure.

With its adoption of supernatural elements, Girlfriend in a Coma marked a change in Coupland's work. Hitherto, his narratives were focused on conventional characters living in a carefully drawn, instantly recognizable modern world. The plots of Girlfriend in a Coma and his subsequent novels have all introduced either supernatural occurrences or involve "low probability events" (e.g., air disasters, meteorite impacts). This change has moved Coupland away from his earlier generation-defining work and allowed him to develop and explore new and darker themes. Coupland is constantly curious about how the human mind and soul functions within the generally static realm of middle class suburbia.

While his books are rich in humour, observation and carefully drawn vignettes, some of Coupland's early critics noted a tendency for the plot development to be lost amongst these elements. The apocalyptic ending of Girlfriend in a Coma, for example, was seen by some to be forced and out of step with the remainder. The United Kingdom’s The Independent called the book "a brilliantly constructed set piece". In the same context, Miss Wyoming (1999), his next work of fiction, was considered by some to be a more rounded and satisfying, even though Coupland himself considers it as a light comic novel.

In Japan in 2001, Coupland published God Hates Japan, a Japanese language novel done in collaboration with Vancouver computer animator Michael Howatson. The novel describes psychic malaise in Tokyo after the collapse of the 1980s economic bubble. That same year, Coupland also published All Families Are Psychotic, a comic novel exploring familial disintegration using the urban Florida landscape as a metaphor for human relationships.

In 2002 Coupland collaborated with French conceptual art maker Pierre Huyghe on School Spirit, a book that explored the ominous and unexpected darkness in high school environments. At the time Coupland was writing Hey Nostradamus!, a novel that was published in 2003. This was a dark story that explored the transmission of religious and secular beliefs from one generation to the next. It used the backdrop of a high school shooting massacre similar to that of the April 1999 Columbine High School massacre in Colorado. As with all of Coupland’s novels, it was distinctly different from the novel preceding it. The book was well received and was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and won the Canadian Authors' Association Award for Fiction.

In 2004, Coupland published Eleanor Rigby, a novel about human loneliness, its title coming from the Beatles song of the same name. Rather than being merely comic, like 1999’s Miss Wyoming, Eleanor Rigby showed more maturity. The Los Angeles Times called it "moving and bittersweet".

In 2006 Coupland published JPod, which he described as a sequel "in spirit" to 1995’s Microserfs. JPod explores the lives of tech workers in a Vancouver computer game company, which appears to be loosely based on Electronic Arts. The novel is an exercise in black comedy that investigates life inside an amoral culture bombarded with too much information from sources such as the internet. The book also explores Pop Art and text art typography themes Coupland explored in 1995.

In 2006, a television pilot based on the first two chapters of JPod was commissioned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Written by Coupland, filming was completed in early 2007. A series of 13 episodes was announced in July 2007 for broadcast in 2008 on CBC.

In 2007, The Gum Thief was published in hard cover, playfully morphing the title from The Bicycle Thief; the main characters of the novel all steal and/or chem gum at one point or another and gum is a key element in a novel within the novel which is called Glove Pond. The Gum Thief is written as a series of letters and novel excerpts from Glove Pond, and is set largely within a Staples office superstore.

Coupland’s literary influences are largely post-World War II novelists such as Margaret Drabble, Truman Capote, Kurt Vonnegut, Joan Didion, and the writings of Andy Warhol.

In 2001, Coupland stopped writing for magazines and concentrated more on his visual art. His work is a continuation of the Pop Art sensibility, often blurring the distinction between art and design. In 2005, he began to explore the relationship between literary and visual arts cultures. Using text and lyrics from such pop culture sources as R.E.M., The Smiths, Chuck Palahniuk, and Bret Easton Ellis, Coupland’s work explores the infinite number of ways in which a single sentence or lyric can be interpreted. Coupland also did a series of works in which he chewed up copies of his own books and wove them into hornets nests; in so doing, breaking the link between modernism and nature.

In 2004, Coupland wrote and performed a play, September 10, for England’s Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-on-Avon. 2006 marks the release of Everything’s Gone Green, a film based on an original screenplay by Coupland.

In 2005 Coupland published Terry, a book on Canadian Terry Fox. Fox was a humanitarian, athlete, and cancer treatment activist famous for his 1980 Marathon of hope in which he ran two-thirds of the way across Canada on one leg (the equivalent of one marathon every day for 143 days).

In 2006 a feature length documentary, Souvenir of Canada, based on Coupland’s two eponymous non-fiction works was released.

Sofia Coppola's company was reported to have acquired the film rights to Generation X in 2001.[1] However, this was later discounted by Coupland's own website, which said that Coppola's company has never been connected to a film adaptation.

Coupland is gay[2] (he came out in February 2005), though his works only rarely address gay themes. He describes himself as being politically unaligned, and has espoused both conservative and liberal views (for example, he has been critical of the Canadian healthcare system and gun control while also supportive of multi-culturalism and social liberalism). He is a monotheist, but is not a churchgoer[3] and does not discuss denomination.

In June 2007, Coupland was elected into the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA).[2]

In October 2007, Coupland announced he would no longer give any public readings or talk on stage about his work. This was at a speaking event in London - the recording of this event is online at SCI-FI-LONDON [4].

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Fiction

[edit] Non-fiction

[edit] Drama and screenplays

Announced on 9 February 2006, based on the novel of the same name. As of autumn 2006, it is in pre-production.
  • JPod (2008) (TV series)
Premieres January 8th on CBC.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gill, Alexandra. "Filming 'that Coupland world'". The Globe and Mail. July 2, 2005.
  2. ^ Duralde, Alonso, "All the lonely people". The Advocate, February 1, 2005.
  3. ^ Draper, Brian, "Engaging in Reflection", Third Way magazine, March 11, 1997.
  4. ^ Sci-Fi-London's webTV service - Coupland declares his last public reading. "[1]"

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

Template:Persondataca:Douglas Coupland da:Douglas Coupland de:Douglas Coupland et:Douglas Coupland es:Douglas Coupland fr:Douglas Coupland it:Douglas Coupland he:דאגלס קופלנד ja:ダグラス・クープランド ru:Коупленд, Дуглас fi:Douglas Coupland sv:Douglas Coupland

Personal tools