Valérie Harvey (born 1979) is a Canadian writer and sociologist from Quebec. Her main interest is Japan, where she lived for several years (in Kyoto), with six publications devoted to the country. For her doctoral thesis in sociology, she returned to Quebec to study Quebecois fathers and parental leave.
Valérie Harvey was born in 1979, in La Malbaie,[1]Charlevoix region of Quebec. She studied there until CEGEP, where she specialized in arts and literature. She continued in this vein at the Université de Sherbrooke, where she obtained her first bachelor's degree in Francophone literature, followed by a second bachelor's degree in communications and multimedia. At the same time, she studied several languages, which led her to Japanese.[2]
In 2003, she started her travel blog "Nomadesse". In 2006, she left Quebec to spend a year in Kyoto, Japan. In 2010, Hamac-Carnets published her first book on Japan,[3] the travel journal, Passion Japon (Passion Japon). She went on to write several novels set in a northern Japanese world for Québec Amérique. She returned to school in 2009 to complete a master's degree in sociology at Université Laval on Japanese women's desire to have children. Her doctorate in sociology focused on Quebec fathers and parental leave.[4]
She was a sociologist with Éclaireurs, as well as at the Humanistes table,[5] on Radio-Canada's Médium large program.
As a singer and songwriter, she was a member of the duo Yume, which composed and performed songs in Japanese and French. [1]
Awards and honours
2021, Special prize from the NHKNodo Jiman show[6] - Let's Sing Japanese Songs of the NHK World
2020, Finalist, Literary Creation Prize from the City of Quebec and the Quebec International Book Fair[7] pour L'Ombre du Shinobi
2018, Parallel Universes Literary Prize, for Les Fleurs du Nord[8]
2018, Finalist, Prix Adolecteurs, for Les Fleurs du Nord'[9]
Selected works
Révolution Papa, Comment les pères québécois transforment la masculinité, Québec Amérique, 2021 ISBN978-2-7644-4282-1
Série Hokkaidô, Québec Amérique, collection Magellan: