Other PublicationsBooks - First English Language The Middle Ages in Popular Culture: Medievalism and Genre. Nicola Griffith’s Hild: the authenticity of intersectionality. I’m now a dual US/UK citizen, hold a PhD in Creative Writing from Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, and married to writer Kelley Eskridge in Seattle.ġ As described by Lukács, as opposed to Jameson’s assertion of Scott’s essential melodrama (Anderson 2011).īutler, C. In 2016 I began #CripLit, an online community for writers with disabilities with >1,000 regular participants. Direct results of that research include the $50,000 Half the World Global Literati Prize for prose and scripts by and about women (2016), and the new Her Voice literary festival in Toronto (2017). In 2015 I founded the Literary Prize Data, an international working group to uncover and tell the story of how gender bias operates within the publishing ecosystem. It is a serious historical novel in the well-researched, realist mode established by Sir Walter Scott 1 that deconstructs the intersectional construction of the oppressive discourse of gender, sexual orientation, and race (Reid, 2015). The novel aims to operate as a second-order discourse regarding the “contingency of events” and illusory nature of history’s seeming solidity (Butler and O’Donovan, 2012: 15). Hild is a novel focalised around the woman born more than 1400 years ago who is today known as St Hilda of Whitby. My six novels, most recently Hild, have all won awards and been translated other languages.
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