Joanna Bator
Joanna Bator | |
---|---|
Born | Wałbrzych, Poland | 2 February 1968
Occupation | novelist, journalist, academic |
Awards | Nike Award (2013) Beata Pawlak Award (2005)[1] |
Joanna Bator (born 2 February 1968) is a Polish novelist, journalist, feminist and academic. She specializes in cultural anthropology and gender studies.[2] She is the recipient of the 2013 Nike Award.
Life and career[]
She was born to jewish parents in the town of Wałbrzych in Lower Silesia, south-western Poland. She studied cultural studies at the University of Warsaw. She also graduated from School of Social Sciences affiliated with the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. Her doctoral dissertation concerned the philosophical aspects of the feminist theory and discourse relating to psychoanalysis and postmodernism. In the years 1999-2008 she worked as an assistant professor at the Department of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Between 2007-2011 she lectured at the Polish-Japanese Academy of Information Technology. She also took part in a number of scholarships including at the New School for Social Research in New York and Japan Foundation in Tokyo.
She is known for her keen interest in Japanese culture. Bator's first book on Japan was Japoński wachlarz (The Japanese Fan) written after her two-year stay in Japan.
She has written a number of books, both fiction and non-fiction. Her titles such as The Japanese Fan and Sandy Mountain have received wide acclaim in her native Poland.[3] In 2010, she was nominated for Gdynia Literary Prize and Nike Award for her book Sandy Mountain.[4] In 2013, her novel Ciemno, prawie noc (Eng: Dark, Almost Night) won the Nike Award, Poland's leading literary award.[5][6]
She has also worked as a columnist for Gazeta Wyborcza daily as well as Pani and published articles in such magazines as Tygodnik Powszechny, Twórczość, Bluszcz, Czas kultury and Kultura i społeczeństwo. She has been a member of jury of the Ryszard Kapuściński Award.
In 2014 she was the second Friedrich Dürrenmatt Guest Professor for World Literature[7] at the University of Bern.
Works[]
- Feminism, Postmodernism, Psychoanalysis (2001)
- A Woman (2002)
- The Japanese Fan (2004)
- Sandy Mountain (2009)
- Cloudalia (2010)
- Dark, Almost Night (2013)
- A Shark from Yoyogi Park (2014)
- Island Tear (2015)
- Year of the Rabbit (2016)
- Purezento (2017)
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "JOANNA BATOR LAUREATKĄ NAGRODY IM. BEATY PAWLAK". Retrieved 2017-10-07.
- ^ "Joanna Bator". Retrieved 2017-10-07.
- ^ Profile
- ^ "Nominacje 2010 – Proza" (in Polish). Nagroda Literacka Gdynia. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
- ^ "Nike 2013". Culture.pl. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
- ^ Tadeusz Sobolewski, Michał Wybieralski (6 October 2013). "Nike 2013 dla Joanny Bator za książkę "Ciemno, prawie noc"". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). Retrieved October 17, 2013.
- ^ "Joanna Bator". Walter Benjamin Kolleg. 2016-07-12. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
- 1968 births
- 21st-century Polish novelists
- Polish journalists
- Polish women journalists
- Living people
- Polish feminists
- People from Wałbrzych
- Polish women novelists
- 21st-century Polish women writers
- Nike Award winners
- Polish people stubs