Barbara Browning

Barbara Browning
Born (1961-12-07)December 7, 1961
Madison, Wisconsin
Occupation Professor, Cultural Critic, Novelist, Performer
Nationality American
Genre Nonfiction (cultural analysis), Novels, Poetry, Chamber Choreography
Notable works I'm Trying to Reach You (2012); The Correspondence Artist (2011); Who Is Mr. Waxman? (audiobook, 2007); Infectious Rhythm: Metaphors of Contagion and the Spread of African Culture (1998); Samba: Resistance in Motion (1995)
Notable awards Lambda Literary Award: Bisexual fiction (2011); De La Torre Bueno Prize for outstanding book on dance (Samba: Resistance in Motion); Runner-up, Yale Younger Poets Prize (1989); President's Distinguished Teaching Award, Princeton University
Children Leo Oliveira
Website
admin.tisch.nyu.edu/object/BrowningB.html

Barbara Browning (born December 7, 1961 in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American academic, award winning novelist,[1] dancer, and cultural critic.

Education and career

Browning received her B.A. in comparative literature from Yale University in 1983, spent a year in Brazil on a Fulbright fellowship, where she studied dance, and then returned to Yale to complete her Ph.D. in 1989. She taught for six years in the English Department of Princeton University, where she was awarded the President's Distinguished Teaching Award,[2] and since then has taught in the Department of Performance Studies at the Tisch School of the Arts, New York University, serving for a time as Chair.[3]

Writing

Her first book, Samba: Resistance in Motion (1995),[4] was an ethnographic account of her experiences studying and performing Brazilian dance. It was the 1996 recipient of the de la Torre Bueno Prize for an outstanding publication in the field of dance scholarship. Her second academic book was Infectious Rhythm: Metaphors of Contagion and the Spread of African Culture (1998).[5] Browning began writing fiction in 2004, producing an audionovel in 2007 (Who Is Mr. Waxman?).[6] Her novel The Correspondence Artist was published in 2011 by Two Dollar Radio.[7] Her second novel, I'm Trying to Reach You, was published by Two Dollar Radio in June 2012.[8] It is a multimedia project linked to a series of "chamber choreographies" which she has published on YouTube.[9]

Readers of Browning's academic writing have noted that in addition to representing "a pioneering effort in bringing discussions about the popular culture of Brazil into the North American academy,"[10] it evidences "the imagination of a novelist."[11] By the same token, her novels take up such apparently academic concerns as the work of anthropologists Claude Lévi-Strauss and Mary Douglas, the psychoanalytic theories of Jacques Lacan, and the correspondence of Simone de Beauvoir and Nelson Algren, as well as incorporating photography and referencing video art, leading one reviewer to characterize her work as "part memoir, part fiction, part epistolary, part metadata-existentialist philosophy, part art installation."[12]

Works

Cultural Criticism:

Audio novel:

Novels:

References

  1. "24th Annual Lambda Literary Awards Announced". Bi Magazine. June 5, 2012. Archived from the original on June 10, 2012. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  2. "President's Distinguished Teaching Awards". Princeton University. May 30, 1995.
  3. "Hemispheric Institute Digital Video Library". Retrieved 2012-06-21.
  4. ASIN 0253328675, Samba: Resistance in Motion. ISBN 978-0253328670.
  5. ASIN 0415919800, Infectious Rhythm: Metaphors of Contagion and the Spread of African Culture. ISBN 978-0415919807.
  6. Browning, Barbara (2007). Who Is Mr. Waxman?.
  7. ASIN 0982015194, The Correspondence Artist. ISBN 978-0982015193.
  8. ASIN 0983247110, I'm Trying to Reach You. ISBN 978-0983247111.
  9. "NOISE: Q+A with Editor". Archived from the original on September 26, 2015. Retrieved 2012-07-04.
  10. Philip Galinsky, review of Samba: Resistance in Motion in Yearbook for Traditional Music, (Vol. 30, 1998), 143.
  11. Joan Erdman, review of Samba: Resistance in Motion in Dance Research Journal (Vol. 30, No. 2, Autumn 1998), 77.
  12. KGB Bar & Lit Journal

External links

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