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Maya Chowdhry

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Maya Chowdhry (born 1964) is a British playwright, poet and transmedia interactive artist.

Life

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Maya Chowdhry was born in Edinburgh in 1964.[1] She began writing as an adolescent:

I began writing to stay above water; I wrote to survive teenage years: crushes, exams, obsessional cooking – my poetry was a life-line. When my poetry was published I was asked to read at the launch – to perform my life. It slipped easily off the tongue: I had had years of performing answers to society's questions about my identities; I had written about the questions, searching for my true identity. Readings became performances, multi-media shows, commissions. Suddenly my identity was captured, fractured, sliced and served to audiences and I was a 'live' challenge to myself.[2]

Chowdhry worked for Sheffield Film Co-op in the 1980s, and wrote theatre for young people in the 1990s.[3] Like other black women playwrights such as Jackie Kay and Jacqueline Rudet, Chowdhry was helped by the appointment of the black woman producer Frances-Anne Solomon to BBC Radio 4.

Chowdhry's first play, Monsoon (1993), was broadcast as part of the BBC Young Playwrights' Festival.[4] Monsoon portrays the return of sisters Jalaarnava and Kavitaa, two second-generation migrant young women, to their parents' birthplace in India.[5] The play parallels the experience of menstruation with waiting for the seasonal monsoon.[4] Chowdhry's play Kaahini (1997) was toured by Red Ladder, as one of a series of plays aimed primarily at Asian-British girls. Influenced by the story of Shikhandi in the Mahabharata, the play dramatizes a gender reversal narrative:[4] a British Indian teenage girl, Esha, is brought up by her parents as a boy. After a close friend Farooq falls in love with Esha, she reveals herself to him as a girl and is forced to work through her gender identity.[6]

In 2000 Chowdhry moved into digital work, and received an Arts Council Year of the Artist Award for her digital work destinyNation.[3]

In 2015 Chowdhry collaborated with poet Sarah Hymas on "poetic sculptures" exploring the fragility of life and anthropogenic climate change.[7]

In April 2020 Chowdhry was awarded a COVID-19 Creative Commission from Greater Manchester Combined Authority.[8]

Works

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Plays

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  • (with Jag Rahi Hai) Putting in the Pickle Where the Jam Should Be, Write Back, 1989.
  • Monsoon. In Monsoon: Six Plays By Black & Asian Women, Aurora Metro Press, 1993.
  • The Crossing Path. In New Plays for Young People, Faber and Faber, 2003.
  • Kaahini. Edinburgh: Capercaillie, 2004.

Other writing

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  • Contributions in As Girls Could Boast: New Poetry by Women, 1994.
  • "Living Performance". Journal of Lesbian Studies. Volume 2, 1998. doi:10.1300/J155v02n02_02
  • 'Healing Strategies for Women at War', in Seven Black Women Poets, Crocus Press, 1999.
  • "k/not theory; a self dialogue", Journal of Lesbian Studies. Volume 4, 2000. doi:10.1300/J155v04n04_05
  • (ed. with Mary Sharratt) Bitch Lit. Manchester: Crocus, 2006.
  • The seamstress and the global garment. Manchester : Crocus debuts/Suitcase, 2009.
  • Fossil. Leeds, England: Peepal Tree, 2016.

References

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  1. ^ Deirdre Osborne (2016). "Introduction". In Deirdre Osborne (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to British Black and Asian Literature (1945–2010). Cambridge University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-107-13924-4.
  2. ^ Quoted in Lynda Hall, ed. (2003). Telling Moments: Autobiographical Lesbian Short Stories. Terrace Books. p. xvii. ISBN 978-0-299-19113-9.
  3. ^ a b Maya Chowdhry, Peepal Tree Press.
  4. ^ a b c Elaine Aston (2002). "Chowdhry, Maya". In Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. Routledge. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-134-70025-7.
  5. ^ Gabriele Griffin (2003). Contemporary Black and Asian Women Playwrights in Britain. Cambridge University Press. pp. 94–102. ISBN 978-1-139-44184-1.
  6. ^ Gabriele Griffin (2003). Contemporary Black and Asian Women Playwrights in Britain. Cambridge University Press. pp. 132–137. ISBN 978-1-139-44184-1.
  7. ^ Joe Williams, Art exhibition highlights difficulties facing LGBT South Asians on the eve of Diwali, Pink News, 10 November 2015. Accessed 16 August 2020.
  8. ^ Nigel Barlow, Sixty artists, musicians and other creatives awarded £500 each to help create Greater Manchester's COVID-19 cultural archive, About Manchester, 17 April 2020. Accessed 16 August 2020.
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