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Nina Witoszek Nina Witoszek (Fitzpatrick) is a Polish-Irish-Norwegian writer and research professor at the Center for Development and the Environment in Oslo. She is also director of the Arne Næss Programme on Global Justice and the Environment (SUM) at the University of Oslo. Prior to her work at SUM, she taught comparative cultural history at the National University of Ireland in Galway (1995-1997) and the European University in Florence (1997-1999). She held fellowships at the Swedish Collegium of the Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Uppsala (1993), Robinson College, Cambridge (1995) and Mansfield College, Oxford (2001) and visiting professorship at Stanford University (2010).

Nina Witoszek
Born (1954-07-15) July 15, 1954 (age 68)
Poland
NationalityPolish, Norwegian
Alma materUniversity of Wrocław
OccupationHistorian, writer, Research Professor
EmployerUniversity of Oslo
Political partyGreen Party (Norway)
AwardsFritt Ord Award (2005)
Websitehttps://ninawitoszek.org/

Nina Witoszek is also a fiction writer (under the pen name Nina FitzPatrick). She is best known for the infamous collection of short stories, Fables of the Irish Intelligentsia (1991), which won the Irish Times-Aer Lingus Award for fiction in 1991. The prize was subsequently withdrawn when she couldn't prove her Irish ancestry. Until 2001 her fictional work – including The Loves of Faustyna (1995) and Daimons (2003), as well as several well film scripts – was written together with her late husband Pat Sheeran[citation needed]. She is also a script writer of a series of documentary films about iconic Norwegian thinkers and exploreres, such as Fridtjof Nansen, Arne Næss, and Thor Heyerdahl. Witoszek is the recipient of the Norwegian Freedom of Expression Foundation (Fritt Ord) Award for “bringing Eastern European perspectives to the public debate in Scandinavia.” In 2006 she was chosen by the Norwegian daily Dagbladet as “one of the 10 most important intellectuals in Norway.”


Selection of scholarly books



Selected works of fiction




References




    Awards
    Preceded by
    Unni Wikan
    Recipient of the Fritt Ord Award
    2005
    Succeeded by



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