Roz Kaveney (born 9 July 1949) is a British writer, critic, and poet, best known for her critical works about pop culture and for being a core member of the Midnight Rose collective.[1][2] Kaveney's works include fiction and non-fiction, poetry, reviewing, and editing.[3] Kaveney is also a transgender rights activist.[4] She has contributed to several newspapers such as The Independent and The Guardian. She is also a founding member of Feminists Against Censorship and a former deputy chair of Liberty.[5] She was deputy editor of the transgender-related magazine META.
British writer, critic, and poet (born 1949)
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (June 2019)
Appearing on television discussion programme After Dark in 1988
Kaveney attended Pembroke College, Oxford, where she participated in a poetry group that had a particular interest in Martian poetry and shared a flat with Christopher Reid.[6] Kaveney is a transgender woman, who began transition in her last year at Oxford.[7] After being "persuaded to desist by feminist friends", Kaveney delayed her transition for several years. She eventually transitioned around 1978.[7]
Literary career
Kaveney gave up poetry in her twenties, not resuming until reaching 50.[7] Kaveney's poetry was originally written in a rhythmic free verse, although her work later shifted into formalism. Kaveney cites a number of bereavements as the trigger for returning to poetry. Speaking to PinkNews, she said: "When my friend Mike Ford died, suddenly and tragically, I organised a memorial meeting for him and wrote a poem for it completely out of the blue.”[7]
Dialectic of the Flesh was shortlisted for the Lambda Award; Rituals - Rhapsody of Blood, Volume One was short-listed for the Crawford Award, and made the Honor Roll for the Tiptree Award.
Kaveney's first novel, Tiny Pieces of Skull, was published in 2015 by Team Angelica Press, 27 years after she wrote it.[7]
A contributor to The Times Literary Supplement (24 July 2015) reviewed Tiny Pieces of Skull, describing the book as a work which "deserves to be recognised as a seminal fictional work on transgender identity and transphobia... hilarious and chilling".[8] It won the 2016 Best Trans Fiction Lambda Literary Award.[9]
Other work
In 1988, Kaveney made an extended appearance on the television discussion After Dark with among others Andrea Dworkin and Anthony Burgess.[10] Kaveney wrote later:
I met Burgess when I did an After Dark with him and Andrea Dworkin, and it remains worth saying that he was so dreadful that Dworkin and I formed an alliance against him.[11]
In 2021 Kaveney appeared in the documentary Rebel Dykes, which explores the history of a radical lesbian subculture in 1980s London, England.[12]
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