Katharine Beutner
Appearance
(Redirected from Katharine beutner)
Katharine Beutner | |
---|---|
Born | Lancaster, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Education | Smith College (BA) University of Texas (PhD) |
Occupation(s) | Novelist, academic |
Known for | Feminist writings |
Website | katharinebeutner |
Katharine Beutner is an American novelist, essayist, and academic. She is the author of Alcestis, winner of the Edmund White Award from the Publishing Triangle in 2011. From 2013 to 2017 she was an assistant professor of English at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. From 2017 to 2019, she was a visiting assistant professor and from 2019 to 2023, she was an assistant professor of English at the College of Wooster.[1] Since 2023, she has been an associate professor of English at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.[2]
Personal life
[edit]Beutner is bisexual. [3]
Awards
[edit]Year | Book | Award | Category | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Alcestis | Compton Crook Award | — | Shortlisted | [4] |
Edmund White Award | — | Won | |||
Lambda Literary Award | Lesbian Debut Fiction | Shortlisted |
Published works
[edit]Novels
[edit]- Alcestis (Soho Press, 2010)
- Killingly (Soho Press, 2023)
Journals
[edit]- Some Little Lamb (an excerpt from the novel Killingly) (TriQuarterly, 2013)
Academic publications
[edit]- Remixing the Outline: a Middle-State Moment of Revision. Rough Cuts: Media and Design in Process. Curated by Kari Kraus. Digital collection on MediaCommons’ The New Everyday.
- 'The Sole Business of Ladies in Romances': Sharing Histories in Charlotte Lennox’s The Female Quixote. Masters of the Marketplace: British Women Novelists of the 1750s. Ed. Susan Carlile. Bethlehem: Lehigh University Press, May 2011. 165-181.
- Review of A Political Biography of Delarivier Manley, Rachel Carnell. Women’s Writing 17.1 (April 2010): 196-198.
References
[edit]- ^ "College of Wooster English Department Bios". wooster.edu. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
- ^ "UW Milwaukee English Department Bios". uwm.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-06.
- ^ "MFAs, bisexuality, and an announcement". blog.katharinebeutner.com. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
- ^ "Graduate student Katharine Beutner wins Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction".
Categories:
- Living people
- Novelists from Pennsylvania
- University of Texas alumni
- Smith College alumni
- College of Wooster faculty
- 20th-century American novelists
- 21st-century American novelists
- American women novelists
- American women science fiction and fantasy writers
- 20th-century American women writers
- 21st-century American women writers
- Writers from Honolulu
- Novelists from Hawaii
- American women academics
- American novelist stubs