Australian cultural historian and writer
Maria Tumarkin is an Australian cultural historian , essayist and novelist , and is as of 2019[update] senior lecturer in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne , teaching creative writing.
Early life and education
Tumarkin was born and raised in Kharkov , then part of the Soviet Union , now in Ukraine .[ 1] She left her home country in 1989 when she was a teenager, before the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.[ 2]
She holds a Bachelor of Arts and a PhD in cultural history from the University of Melbourne .[ 3]
Writing
She writes books of ideas, reviews, essays and pieces for performance.[ 4]
Academia and projects
She was an Honorary Artistic Outreach Associate (2015–2016) at the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions and a co-creator, with Moya McFadzean, of "The Unending Absence" project.[ 3]
As of 2021[update] Tumarkin taught creative writing at the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne.[ 4]
Works
Books
Essays (selected)
This Narrated Life (Griffith Review, 1 May 2014)[ 6]
No Skin (2 September 2015)[ 7]
Against Motherhood (20 October 2018)[ 8]
Awards
References
^ Wood, Charlotte (23 July 2005). "Traumascapes" . The Age .
^ Dessaix, Robert (19 April 2010). "Otherland: A Journey with My Daughter" . Sydney Morning Herald .
^ a b "Maria Tumarkin" . Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions . Retrieved 8 April 2019 .
^ a b "Maria Tumarkin" . Archived from the original on 10 October 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2019 .
^ Wood, Charlotte (23 July 2005). "Traumascapes" . The Age.
^ Taylor, Anna Frey (31 July 2014). "Why This American Life falls short for writer Maria Tumarkin" . ABC Australia .
^ "A selection of my recent essays" . Maria Tumarkin . Retrieved 8 April 2019 .
^ " 'Against Motherhood Memoirs', Dangerous Ideas about Mothers" . Maria Tumarkin . Retrieved 8 April 2019 . Extract from Dangerous Ideas about Mothers , edited by Camilla Nelson and Rachel Robertson.
^ Steger, Jason (2 September 2015), "Five writers vie for $60,000 Melbourne Prize" , Sydney Morning Herald , retrieved 11 July 2016
^ Where are all the great Australian essays? , 24 February 2016 , Sydney Morning Herald
^ "Lester wins $60,000 Melbourne Prize for Literature; Tumarkin wins Best Writing Award" . Books+Publishing . 15 November 2018. Retrieved 7 January 2019 .
^ "Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2019 shortlists announced" . Books+Publishing . 12 December 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2018 .
^ Nelson, Camilla (8 April 2019). "Stella prize 2019: your guide to the shortlist" . The Guardian . Retrieved 8 April 2019 . Co-published with The Conversation
^ Nelson, Camilla (8 April 2019). "Six books that shock, delve deeply and destroy pieties: your guide to the 2019 Stella Prize shortlist" . The Converstation. Retrieved 8 April 2019 .
^ Perkins, Cathy (Summer 2019). "Excellence in Literature and History". SL Magazine . 12 (4): 52– 55.
^ Alice, Jessica (19 March 2020). "Maria Tumarkin on winning the 2020 Windham Campbell: 'It feels like a complicated gift' " . The Guardian . ISSN 0261-3077 . Retrieved 20 March 2020 .
External links
International National Academics People