杏吧原创

Skip to Content

David Stymeist

Research Interests

  • Creative Writing (Poetry)
  • The literature, ideas, and culture of the 16th and 17th centuries
  • Crime Writing

D.S. Stymeist鈥檚 debut collection, The Bone Weir, was published by Frontenac Press and was a finalist for the Canadian Author鈥檚 Association Award for Poetry. His next collection, Cluster Flux, will appear in 2023 also with Frontenac. He continues to publish widely in both academic and literary magazines including Canadian Literature, The Antigonish Review, Prairie Fire, and The Fiddlehead. Alongside fending off Crohn鈥檚 disease, he teaches creative writing, crime fiction, and Renaissance literature at 杏吧原创 University. He grew up as a non-indigenous member of a mixed heritage family on O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation; these formative cultural experiences continue to guide and shape his identity. As former president of VERSe Ottawa, he helped organize VERSeFest, Ottawa鈥檚 international poetry festival as well as manage the city of Ottawa鈥檚 Poet Laureate program.

Creative Publications

  • Cluster Flux. Frontenac House Press, 2023. (Poetry)
  • The Bone Weir. Frontenac House Press, 2016. (Poetry)

Creative Awards

  • Shortlist, Canadian Author鈥檚 Association award for Poetry, 2016.
  • Shortlist, Vallum Award for Poetry, 2015.
  • Honourable Mention, Freefall Award for Poetry, 2022.
  • Shortlist, Freefall Award for Poetry, 2018.

Academic Awards

  • 杏吧原创 Teaching Award, 2011.
  • Research Achievement Award, RDC, 2008.

Academic Publications

鈥淪tudents Teaching Texts to Students: Integrating LdL and Digital Archives.鈥 College Teaching 63.2 (2015): 46-51.

鈥淎nxiety Fiction: Domestic Poisoning in Early Modern News, Arden of Faversham, and Hamlet.鈥 Essays in Renaissance Culture 41 (2015): 30-55.

鈥淐riminal Biography in Early Modern Crime Pamphlets. 鈥Taking Exception to the Law: Materializing Injustice in Early Modern English Literature, eds. Don Beecher, Travis DeCook, Andrew Wallace, and Grant Williams. Toronto: U of Toronto Press, 2014.

鈥淔ortune, that arrant whore, ne鈥檈r turns the key to th鈥 poor鈥: Vagrancy, Old Age, and the Theatre in Shakespeare鈥檚 King Lear. Cahiers Elizabethains 71 (2007): 37-47.

Status, Sodomy, and Persecution in Marlowe鈥檚 Edward II. Studies in English Literature 44.2 (2004): 1-22.

Female Criminality in Henry Goodcole鈥檚 Murder Pamphlets. Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture 36 (2003): 31-48.

鈥淢ust I be Made a Common Sink鈥: Witchcraft and the Theatre in The Witch of Edmonton. Renaissance & Reformation 25.2 (2001): 33-53.

鈥淪trange Wives鈥: Pocahontas in Early Modern Colonial Advertisement. Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 35.3 (2002): 109-26.