Lucie Chenu
Lucie Chenu | |
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Born | (1960-05-10) 10 May 1960 (age 64) |
Occupation | Author |
Language | French |
Nationality | French |
Lucie Chenu (born 10 May 1960) is a French author who works in the field of fantastic literature, fantasy and science fiction. A doctor in bacterial genetics,[1] she received the Bob Morane Prize twice (2008 and 2009) for her work as an anthologist.[2]
For several years, Chenu had been active in professional publishing as well as in fanzinats and webzines.[3][4] She co-directed the Imaginaires collection from Glyphe editions from 2007 to 2009, when she resigned to devote herself to her own writing. However, as she is seemingly unable to stay away for very long from promoting the genres to which she has always devoted herself, Chenu was responsible for French-language fiction at the Mythologica[5] magazine from its creation in 2012 until at the end of the review, and she has collaborated with the review Galaxies[6] since 2013. In addition, she was part of the office of the Syndicat des écrivains de langue française [fr] (Union of French Language Writers ) as an editor from 2014 to 2015.
In 2022 she protested against the eviction of Stéphanie Nicot from the festival Les imaginales by publishing a letter of support for Nicot with other authors among whom Floriane Soulas, Silène Edgar, Sylvie Lainé, Ïan Larue, Estelle Faye, Sara Doke, Sylvie Denis, Robin Hobb, Sarah Buschmann [fr], Charlotte Bousquet [fr] and Anne Besson [fr].[7][8][9]
Bibliography
- Novels
- Les Enfants de Svetambre (2010)
- Les Fantasmes de Svetambre (2014)
- Anthologies
- (Pro)Créations (2007)
- Contes de villes et de fusées (2010)
- De Brocéliande en Avalon (2008)
- Et d'Avalon à Camelot (2012)
- Identités (2009)
- Passages (2010)
- Univers & Chimères n° 1: la Musique (2004)
References
- ^ "Thèse de doctorat". catalogue.biu-toulouse.fr.
- ^ "Bob Morane" (in French). NooSFere. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ^ "Horrifique". horrifique.tripod.com.
- ^ "Univers & Chimères". univers.chimeres.org.
- ^ "Mythologica". www.mythologica.net.
- ^ "Galaxies". www.galaxies-sf.com.
- ^ "Affirmer à Stéphanie Nicot "confiance, estime et fidélité"". ActuaLitté.com (in French). Retrieved 19 July 2024.
- ^ Prolongeau, Hubert (24 May 2022). "Aux Imaginales d'Épinal, les polémiques éclatent en série". www.telerama.fr (in French). Archived from the original on 20 July 2024. Retrieved 20 July 2024.
- ^ "Imaginales d'Épinal : un anniversaire sous tension". Livres Hebdo (in French). Retrieved 20 July 2024.
- v
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- e
14th–15th century |
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17th century |
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18th century |
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19th century |
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20th century |
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- Feminist science fiction
- Gender in speculative fiction
- Single-gender world
- Women in speculative fiction
- Láadan (1982)
- Battle of sexes in science fiction [fr]
anthologies,
critiques by year
- Women of Wonder (1975)
- Aurora: Beyond Equality (1976)
- The Language of the Night (1979)
- More Women of Wonder (1979)
- How to Suppress Women's Writing (1983)
- A Cyborg Manifesto (1984)
- To Write Like a Woman (1995)
- We Have Always Fought (2013)
- The Geek Feminist Revolution (2016)
- Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora (2000)
- She's such a geek! : women write about science, technology & other nerdy stuff (2006)
- Never Say You Can't Survive: How to Get Through Hard Times By Making Up Stories (2021)
- L'Oiselle (1909)
- Cyborg
- Jirel of Joiry (1934)
magazines,
comics,
manga,
podcasts
- Forerunner (magazine)
- The Witch and the Chameleon
- Aqueduct Press
- Janus
- Bitch Planet
- Ōoku: The Inner Chambers
- Wombs (2009)
- Our Opinions Are Correct
- Wiscon
- Sad Puppies (2013–2017)