Hendrika Ruger is a Dutch-Canadian author, publisher, and the founder of Netherlandic Press publishing company.[1]
History
Hendrika Ruger was born in 1928 and began publishing in the late 1950s.[a] In 1957, Ruger's paper "National Music" was presented at the University of Windsor's Annual Music Meeting.[3] Hendrika Ruger graduated from the University of Windsor in Canada in May 1971.[4] In 1976, Ruger was appointed as a Specialist Librarian at Windsor's Carnegie Library.[5]
In 1981, Hendrika Ruger founded Netherlandic Press, a publishing company focused on literary works by Dutch-Canadians and Canadians of Dutch descent.[6][7] In the 1980s and 1990s, Netherlandic Press published eight volumes of poetry and short fiction by Dutch-Canadians, as well as several English translations of Dutch texts. Ruger's books have celebrated Dutch-Canadian writers such as Guy Vanderhaeghe, Aritha Van Herk and Ralph D. Witten.[8][9][10] In a review of Hendrika Ruger's book Distant Kin, Tamara J. Palmer wrote that "although it is certainly not heavy handed in its exploration of what might be called 'the Dutch-Canadian experience,' Hendrika Ruger makes clear that the stories and poems collected here do represent recent attempts by the children of immigrants to examine the history of their parents' migration and struggle and to give their discoveries academic or literary form."[11]
^Schryer, Frans J. (1998). The Netherlandic Presence in Ontario: Pillars, Class and Dutch Ethnicity. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. pp. 408, note 102. ISBN978-0889203129.
^Seiler, Tamara Palmer (1996). "Multi-Vocality and National Literature: Toward a Post-Colonial and Multicultural Aesthetic". Journal of Canadian Studies. 31 (3): 148–165. doi:10.3138/jcs.31.3.148. S2CID145178951.
^Ruger, Hendrika (1983). "Never Sisters - Aritha Van Herk". From A Chosen Land: A Dutch-Canadian Anthology of Poetry and Prose. Netherlandic Press. pp. 57–64. ISBN978-0919417090.
^Palmer, Tamara J (1990). "Books in Review: Adaptations". Canadian Literature (127). University of British Columbia: 149.
^Brebner, Diana (2004). Bolster, Stephanie (ed.). The Ishtar Gate: Last and Selected Poems. McGill-Queens University Press. p. 165. ISBN978-0773528352.