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Educators wonder how to teach the writings of Alice Munro in wake of daughter's revelations

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 For decades, Robert Lecker has read, taught and written about Alice Munro, the Nobel laureate from Canada renowned for her short stories.

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 For decades, Robert Lecker has read, taught and written about Alice Munro, the Nobel laureate from Canada renowned for her short stories. A professor of English at McGill University in Montreal, and author of numerous critical studies of Canadian fiction, he has thought of Munro as the 鈥渏ewel鈥 in the crown of her country's literature and source of some of the richest material for classroom discussion.

But since learning that Munro declined to leave her husband after he had sexually assaulted and harassed her daughter, Lecker now wonders how to teach her work, or if he should even try.

鈥淚 had decided to teach a graduate course on Munro in the winter of 2025,鈥 Lecker says. 鈥淣ow I have serious questions whether I feel ethically capable of offering that course.鈥

Andrea Robin Skinner, daughter of Munro and James Munro, wrote in the Toronto Star earlier this month that she had been assaulted at age 9 by Munro鈥檚 second husband, Gerard Fremlin. She alleged that he continued to harass and abuse her for the next few years, losing interest when she reached her teens. In her 20s, she told her mother about Fremlin鈥檚 abuse. But Munro, after briefly leaving Fremlin, returned and remained with him until his death in 2013. She would explain to Skinner that she 鈥渓oved him too much鈥 to remain apart.

When Munro died in May at age 92, she was celebrated worldwide for narratives which documented rare insight into her characters鈥 secrets, motivations, passions and cruelties, especially those of girls and women. Admirers cited her not just as a literary inspiration, but as a kind of moral guide, sometimes described as 鈥淪aint Alice.鈥 A New York Times essay that ran shortly after her death, by Canadian author Sheila Heti, was titled 鈥淚 Don鈥檛 Write Like Alice Munro, But I Want to Live Like Her.鈥

鈥淣o one knows the compromises another makes, especially when that person is as private as she was and transforms her trials into fiction,鈥 Heti wrote. 鈥淵et whatever the truth of her daily existence, she still shines as a symbol of artistic purity.鈥

Educators in Canada and beyond are now rethinking her life and work. At Western University in London, Ontario, Munro鈥檚 alma mater, the school has posted a statement on its website saying that it was 鈥渢aking time to carefully consider the impact鈥 of the revelations. Since 2018, Western University has offered an Alice Munro Chair in Creativity, with a mission to 鈥淟ead the creative culture of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, serving as a mentor and a model.鈥 That chair, held for the past academic year by Heti, will be left unfilled as 鈥渨e carefully consider Munro鈥檚 legacy and her ties to Western,鈥 according to the school.

Requests with Heti鈥檚 agent and publicists for comment were not immediately answered.

For the fall semester at Harvard University, authors and faculty members Laura van den Berg and Neel Mukherjee will be co-teaching 鈥淩eading for Fiction Writers,鈥 a review of literary works ranging from the science fiction of Octavia Butler to the 鈥渞ealist鈥 fiction of Munro. Van den Berg, a prize-winning writer whose books include the story collection 鈥淭he Isle of Youth鈥 and the novel 鈥淪tate of Paradise,鈥 says that Munro鈥檚 failure to support Skinner has forced her to rethink her approach to the class.

鈥淚鈥檒l never read Munro the same away again, and won鈥檛 be teaching her the same way,鈥 she says. 鈥淭o me, what was so painful about what Andrea Skinner has been through is the silence. And feeling that she could break her silence after her mother was gone. To me, to just stand in front a group of students and read the lecture I had originally prepared would feel like a second silencing.鈥

A former student of Lecker's, Kellie Elrick, says she is still figuring out how Munro should be taught and how to think of her work. Munro's stories have enriched her life, she says, and she doesn't regret reading them. Elrick, entering her fourth year at McGill, sees parallel narratives, 鈥渄ifficult to reconcile,鈥 of 鈥淢unro the writer鈥 and 鈥淢unro the mother.鈥

鈥淚 think that it鈥檚 perhaps both productive and dangerous to read an author鈥檚 work biographically,鈥 she added. 鈥淚t may allow us (the readers) to think we may understand things, but there are things we can never truly know about the lives and intentions of writers.鈥

One of the Munro stories that van den Berg and Mukherjee plan to teach is 鈥淔riend of My Youth,鈥 narrated by a woman long estranged from her mother, whose 鈥渋deas were in line with some progressive notions of her times, and mine echoed the notions that were favored in mine.鈥 Mukherjee, a Booker Prize finalist in 2014 for the novel 鈥淭he Lives of Others,鈥 is unsure about how, or whether, to work in the recent news about Munro when teaching 鈥滷riend of My Youth," which the author had dedicated to her own mother.

He believes in separating the 鈥渁rt from the artist, that we all have done bad things.鈥 He considers himself 鈥渧ery conflicted,鈥 sharing van den Berg鈥檚 horror that Munro chose her husband over her daughter, but also finding that her work may have gained 鈥渞icher depth, now that we know something in her life that she may have been trying to come to terms with.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 see writers as would-be saints,鈥 he says.

Hillel Italie, The Associated Press

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