词条 | Kevin Killian |
释义 |
|image = Killian Kevin by Daniel Nicoletta.jpeg |imagesize = |name = Kevin Killian |caption = |pseudonym = |birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1952}} |birth_place = |death_date = |death_place = |occupation = Poet, author, editor, playwright |genre = LGBT literature |movement = |debut works = |influences = |influenced = |website = |signature = }}Kevin Killian (born 1952)[1] is an American poet, author, editor, and playwright of primarily LGBT literature.[2][3] My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer, which he co-edited with Peter Gizzi, won the American Book Award for poetry in 2009.[3] His novel, Impossible Princess, won the 2010 Lambda Literary Award as the best gay erotic fiction work of 2009.[4] Killian is also co-founder of the Poets Theater, an influential poetry, stage, and performance group based in San Francisco.[5] Life and careerKevin Killian was raised Roman Catholic and attended a Roman Catholic parochial school run by Franciscan friars.[7][6] He discussed these experiences in an essay in the edited work Wrestling With the Angel, which describes the experiences of 21 gay men with religion.[7] He was also the New York City spelling bee champion.[8] Kevin attended graduate school at the State University of New York at Stony Brook (SUNY-Stony Brook) in the 1970s, and moved to San Francisco in 1980.[7][9] Although he is gay and Dodie Bellamy is a lesbian, the couple married and have an active heterosexual sex life.[1] Killian admired the work of JT LeRoy (later to be revealed as the pen name and persona of author Laura Albert), and held public readings of LeRoy's work in 2000.[10] As a beginning novelist, Killian tied for first place in the "Hamming Up Hammett" Dashiell Hammett bad writing contest in San Francisco in 1988.[11] Author Dodie Bellamy featured him as a partially fictional character in her vampire novel, The Letters of Mina Harker.[12] His poetry has appeared in the anthology The Best American Poetry 1988, the magazine Discontents, and the anthology Good Times: Bad Trips.[13] Killian once based an entire volume of poetry on the work of horror film director Dario Argento[14] (motivated to do so as a response to the AIDS epidemic).[7] Killian also helped author Alvin Orloff polish chapters of his novel Gutterboys.[15] Noted author Edmund White, writing in The New York Times, described his work as "a kind of mandarin American casualness that is peculiar to ... West Coast writers ... a school of refined but deceptively offhand stylists."[16] The Village Voice called My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer, which he co-edited with Peter Gizzi, "impeccably edited".[17] The work was also highly praised by The New York Times.[18] Killian's 2009 collection of short gay erotic fiction, Impossible Princess, won the Lambda Literary Foundation Award for best gay men's erotica.[4] It was his third collection of short fiction.[19] Killian is founder and former director of Small Press Traffic.[20] He now edits the poetry 'zine Mirage.[21] Poets Theater and retrospective workKillian also has some acting experience. His interest in theatre emerged in the early 1980s when he saw experimental plays by Carla Harryman.[22] Harryman and Tom Mandel subsequently cast him in their play, Fist of the Colossus.[23] He co-founded the Poets Theater in San Francisco,[5] and has acted in as well as written pieces for staging by the group.[22] As of 2001, he had written 31 plays.[23] He co-authored the performance art piece The Red and the Green in 2005 with cinematographer Karla Milosevich.[24] In 2009, Killian and David Brazil co-edited a collection of Poets Theater pieces, The Kenning Anthology of Poets Theatre: 1945-1985.[5] Killian is also active in bringing attention to important LGBTQ artists and writers of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. He has held poetry readings of a wide number of influential poets and writers, and participated in a number of panels, art installations, retrospectives, and memorials. For example, in 2008 he was a featured speaker at a University of Maine "Poetry of the 1970s" conference.[25] He and artist Colter Jacobsen also helped organize a major tribute to the Kiki Gallery ("Kiki: The Proof Is in the Pudding"), a highly influential art gallery in San Francisco in the 1980s which featured the work of LGBTQ artists.[26] Published worksStory and poetry collections
Novels
Biographies
Edited works
Plays
References1. ^1 Bellamy, Dodie. "My Mixed Marriage." The Village Voice. June 27, 2000. 2. ^David Bergman. "Do We Need A Gay Literature?" The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide. January–February 2010, p. 25; "Stars and Rainbows." San Francisco Chronicle. June 22, 2001, p. 5. 3. ^{{cite web |author=American Booksellers Association |title=The American Book Awards / Before Columbus Foundation [1980–2012] |year=2013 |url=http://www.bookweb.org/btw/awards/The-American-Book-Awards---Before-Columbus-Foundation.html |work=BookWeb |quote=2009 [...] Gizzi and Kevin Killian (Wesleyan University Press) |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130313174235/http://bookweb.org/btw/awards/The-American-Book-Awards---Before-Columbus-Foundation.html |archivedate=March 13, 2013 |accessdate=September 25, 2013}} 4. ^1 Valenzuela, Tony. "Winners of 22nd Annual Lambda Literary Awards." Lambda Literary Foundation. May 28, 2010. Accessed 2010-05-28. 5. ^1 2 Pohl, R.D. "Poets Theater at Burchfield Penney Art Center." Buffalo News. April 2, 2009. 6. ^Wiegand, David and Holt, Patricia. "Books in Brief." San Francisco Chronicle. June 18, 1995. 7. ^Wrestling With the Angel: Faith and Religion in the Lives of Gay Men. Brian Bouldrey, ed. Reprint ed. New York: Riverhead Trade, 1996. 8. ^Carroll, Jon. "Jon Carroll." San Francisco Chronicle. May 22, 2008. 9. ^Bradshaw, Joseph. "Reviving Jack Spicer: An Interview with Kevin Killian." Rain Taxi. Winter 2008. Accessed 2010-05-29. 10. ^Tudor, Silke. "Night Crawler." SF Weekly. May 10, 2000; Chonin, Neva. "An Enigmatic Writer Depicts Secret Worlds." San Francisco Chronicle. June 26, 2000. 11. ^[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OnwUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=-wIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2093,220439&dq=kevin-killian&hl=en "Would-Be Writers With Style, Dash Hammett Up In Contest."] Toledo Blade. November 1, 1988. 12. ^Benderson, Bruce."Book Review: The Letters of Mina Harker." The Village Voice. April 14, 1998. 13. ^Gilbert, Matthew. "Book Review: The Best American Poetry 1988." Boston Globe. January 27, 1989; Harmanci, Reyhan. "Flip That Bad Trip." San Francisco Chronicle. September 13, 2007. 14. ^Dark, Jane. "Fever Pitch." The Village Voice. August 13, 2002. 15. ^Ford, Dave. "Author Hangs Onto His Mad Cap As He Captures '80s Gay Scene in 'Gutterboys'." San Francisco Chronicle. August 13, 2004. 16. ^White, Edmund. "Sex and the City." The New York Times. February 21, 1999. 17. ^1 "The Best Books of 2008." The Village Voice. December 10, 2008. 18. ^Garner, Dwight. "Sometimes Love Lives Alongside Loneliness." New York Times. December 24, 2008. 19. ^McMurtrie, John. "Fall Preview." San Francisco Chronicle. September 6, 2009. 20. ^Schwartz, Stephen. "Alternative S.F. Bookstore Hits Tough Times." San Francisco Chronicle. August 27, 1992. 21. ^Feinstein, Lea. "Twenty-Five Artists, Five Spaces, Five Weeks, and a Multitude of Visions." SF Weekly. July 26, 2006. 22. ^1 Cook, David. "The Poets Theater Jubilee Brings Verse to the Stage." SF Weekly. January 23, 2002. 23. ^1 2 3 4 Sullivan, Gary. "Kevin Killian: Interview." readme. Spring/Summer 2001. Accessed 2010-05-29. 24. ^"Angel Street." The Oregonian. September 2, 2005. 25. ^Burnham, Emily. "Words Processing." Bangor Daily News. June 7, 2008. 26. ^Vogel, Tracy. "The Anger and the Ecstasy of Kiki Revisited." SF Weekly. July 9, 2008. External links
24 : 1952 births|Writers from San Francisco|Gay writers|Living people|Lambda Literary Award winners|LGBT dramatists and playwrights|LGBT writers from the United States|American male novelists|20th-century American novelists|21st-century American novelists|LGBT poets|LGBT novelists|American male short story writers|20th-century American poets|20th-century American dramatists and playwrights|21st-century American poets|American male poets|American male dramatists and playwrights|20th-century American short story writers|21st-century American short story writers|PEN Oakland/Josephine Miles Literary Award winners|American Book Award winners|20th-century American male writers|21st-century American male writers |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。