You can find below some information about eight contemporary LGBTQ writers. Read all about them and decide what information is more relevant than other. Then, decide how many categories would you use to sum that information up and assign a colour to each of those categories using your more brightest highlighters.
Emma Donoghue was Born in Dublin, Ireland, in October 1969, being the youngest of eight children. She attended Catholic convent schools in Dublin, earning a first-class honours BA in English and French from University College Dublin in 1990. She received her PhD (on the concept of friendship between men and women in eighteenth-century English fiction) from the University of Cambridge in 1997. Since 1998 she lives in London, Ontario with her partner Chris Roulston and their son Finn and daughter Una. Emma is best known for her fiction, which has been translated into over forty languages. Some of her books include My newest venture (for middle-grade readers, 8 to 12), The Wonder (a finalist for Canada's Giller Prize inspired by about fifty cases of 'fasting girls' over the centuries), Frog Music (a literary mystery inspired by a never-solved murder of a crossdressing frog catcher in San Francisco in 1876) and Room (narrated by a five-year-old called Jack, who lives in a single room with his Ma and has never been outside). Emma herself adapted Room for the big screen and the consequent film was shortlisted for an Academy Award, Golden Globe and Bafta for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Tomson Highway was born in a snow bank on the Manitoba/Nunavut border to a family of nomadic caribou hunters. He had the great privilege of growing up in two languages, neither of which was French or English; they were Cree, his mother tongue, and Dene, the language of the neighbouring "nation," a people with whom they roamed and hunted. Today, he enjoys an international career as playwright, novelist, and pianist/songwriter. His best known works are the plays The Rez Sisters, Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing, Rose, Ernestine Shuswap Gets Her Trout and the best-selling novel, Kiss of the Fur Queen. For many years, he ran Canada's premiere Native theatre company, Native Earth Performing Arts (based in Toronto), out of which has emerged an entire generation of professional Native playwrights, actors and, more indirectly, the many other Native theatre companies that now dot the country. He divides his year equally between a cottage in northern Ontario (near Sudbury, from whence comes his partner of 29 years) and Gatineau Québec, at both of which locales he is currently at work on his second novel. In 2013, he published his most recent play, The (Post) Mistress; a One-Woman Musical.
Born in 1948 and deceased in 1989, Bernard-Marie Koltès is one of those shooting stars that streak across the literary sky and vanish all too quickly. His language reflects a world view pervaded by upheaval and the guilt of decolonization; his theatre is urban, ambiguous, seductive. His intense, rigorous body of work includes the masterpieces Combat de nègre et de chiens (1979), Dans la solitude des champs de coton (1985), Le retour au désert (1988) and Roberto Zucco (1988); his plays have been staged by the great Peter Stein in Berlin and, notably, Patrice Chéreau in Nanterre and Paris. Here in Canada, Brigitte Haentjens has directed Combat de nègre et de chiens and two productions of La nuit juste avant les forêts.
Tony Kushner: Born in New York City in 1956, and raised in Lake Charles, Louisiana, Kushner is best known for his two-part epic, Angels In America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes. Some of his other plays include A Bright Room Called Day, Slavs!, Hydrotaphia or Homebody/Kabul. He wrote the screenplays for Mike Nichols’ film of Angels In America, and Steven Spielberg’s Munich. In 2012 he wrote the screenplay for Spielberg's movie Lincoln. His screenplay was nominated for an Academy Award, and won the New York Film Critics Circle Award, Boston Society of Film Critics Award, Chicago Film Critics Award, and several others. Kushner is the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, an Emmy Award, two Tony Awards, three Obie Awards, two Evening Standard Awards, an Olivier Award, two Oscar nominations, an Arts Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Spirit of Justice Award from the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, a Cultural Achievement Award from The National Foundation for Jewish Culture, the 2012 National Medal of Arts, and the 2015 Lifetime Achievement in the American Theater Award, among many others. He is the subject of a documentary film, Wrestling with Angels: Playwright Tony Kushner, made by the Oscar-winning filmmaker Freida Lee Mock.
Qiu
Miaojin (1969–1995)—one of Taiwan’s most innovative literary modernists, and
the country’s most renowned lesbian writer—was born in Chuanghua County in
western Taiwan. She graduated with a degree in psychology from National Taiwan
University and pursued graduate studies in clinical psychology at the
University of Paris VIII. Her first published story, Prisoner, received the
Central Daily News Short Story Prize, and her novella Lonely Crowds won the
United Literature Association Award. While in Paris, she directed a
thirty-minute film called Ghost Carnival, and not long after this, at the age
of twenty-six, she committed suicide. The posthumous publications of her novels
Last Words from Montmartre and Notes of a Crocodile made her into one of the
most revered countercultural icons in Chinese letters. After her death in 1995,
she was given the China Times Honorary Prize for Literature. In 2007, a
two-volume edition of her Diaries was published, and in 2017 she became the
subject of a feature-length documentary by Evans Chan titled Death in
Montmartre.
Sarah Waters was born in Wales in 1966. She has written six
novels: Tipping the Velvet (1998), Affinity (1999), Fingersmith (2002), The Night
Watch (2006), The Little Stranger
(2009), and The Paying Guests (2014).
Most of her novels were shortlisted for some of the most prestigious literary
awards, such as the Man Booker Prize or the Orange Prize. She was included in
Granta's prestigious list of 'Best of Young British Novelists 2003', and in the
same year was voted Author of the Year by both publishers and booksellers at
the British Book Awards and the BA Conference. Adaptations include Tipping the Velvet (multi award winning,
BAFTA nominated) for BBC; Fingersmith
(BAFTA nominated) for BBC; Affinity
(several awards worldwide) for ITV; and The
Night Watch for BBC.
Alana Portero (Madrid, 1978) is one of the most stimulating voices of present-day
Spanish poetry. Her voice reverberates in baroque and cavernous verses in which
she speaks of a personal process such as the transition of a transgender
person, full of feminist referents and vindictive vehemence. She
has published the poetry books Música
silenciosa (Silent Music ,2008), Fantasmas (Ghosts, 2010) and Irredento
(2011), all of them under the Endymion Publishing House. After that she
published La próxima tormenta (The next storm, 2014) and, most recently,
La habitación de las ahogadas (The room of the drowned women, 2017). On
that book she establishes a connection with Virginia Woolf's own room, perhaps
with a darker background, but at the same time talking about the way to escape,
to flee, into that place that we can create when there is no physical place in
which to take refuge. Her work includes as well references to neurodivergence,
to race, to class and any other issue that encompasses everything that can be
considered transfeminism. None of her books have been yet translated into
English. She also directs the theater company STRIGA and writes regularly
on the Spanish journalism project El salto diario.
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