Mary Dorcey | |
|---|---|
| Born | October 1950 (age 75) County Dublin, Ireland |
| Occupation | Writer, poet |
| Nationality | Irish |
| Alma mater | Open University |
Mary Dorcey (born October 1950) is an Irish author and poet,feminist, andLGBT+ activist. Her work is known for centring feminist and queer themes, specificallylesbian love and lesbian eroticism.[1][2]
She has published ten books, including seven poetry collections, a collection of short stories, a novel, and one novella. Her latest book, a poetry collection entitledLife Holds Its Breath, was published in 2022 by Salmon Poetry.
She has won five major awards for literature from theArts Council of Ireland in 1990, 1995, 1999, 2005, and 2008.[3] In 2010, following nominations by the poetNuala Ní Dhomhnaill and novelistEugene McCabe, Dorcey was elected to the Irish Academy of Writers and Artists,Aosdána.
Her poems are taught on both the Irish Junior Certificate English curriculum and on the BritishO Level English curriculum.[4]
Dorcey was born inCounty Dublin, Ireland.[3] She was the first Irish student at theOpen University inEngland and attendedParis Diderot University inParis, France.[5] She has lived and worked in the United States, England, France, Spain, and Japan, and now resides inCounty Wicklow.[3][6][7]
Dorcey was the first Irish woman to address gay and lesbian lives in poetry and fiction.[5][8] She joined theIrish Women's Liberation Movement in 1972 and was a founding member of Irish Women United, Women for Radical Change, and The Movement for Sexual Liberation.[5][9][10] She came out in 1974. Her first collection of poetry,Kindling, was published in London, in 1987 by the feminist publishing houseOnlywomen Press. She has since published six additional poetry collections, a novel, anovella, and a collection of short stories.[3][5]
Her poetry and fiction are taught at universities throughout Europe, the United States, and Canada. Over the past 30 years her work has been the subject of academic essays and critiques.[11][12][13][14][15]
Dorcey's writing is noted as the first work of Irish literature to portrayromantic and erotic relationships between women. Examples includeA Noise from the Woodshed (1989), andBiography of Desire (1997). Her themes include thecathartic role of the outsider, political injustice, and the nature of the erotic power tosubvert and transfigure.[15]
Both her short story collection,A Noise from the Woodshed, and her novel,Biography of Desire, are included in 'The Greatest Book List Ever' in Robert Lindsay's Classic Books of the Past One Hundred Years. Her short story collectionA Noise from the Woodshed won TheRooney Prize for Irish Literature in 1990.[16]
Her work has been performed on radio and television, and her stories have been dramatized for radio (BBC) and for stage productions in Ireland, Britain, and Australia:In the Pink (The Raving Beauties) andSunny Side Plucked.[5]
Dorcey's poetry and fiction have been reproduced in more than one hundred anthologies representing Irish, gay, and women's literature. Her poems have been performed on radio and television stations, such asBBC,RTÉ, andChannel 4, and have been taught on the English curriculum for the IrishJunior Certificate and BritishGCSEs.[5]
"First Love" was selected for the revised Junior Cycle and included in the BBCanthologyA Hundred Favourite Poems of Childhood.[17] Her stories have been dramatized for radio and stage productions in Ireland, the United Kingdom, and Australia.[5] In March 2023, her poem "Summer" was broadcast on theLondon Underground to markSt Patrick's Day.[3]
She is currently a research associate atTrinity College Dublin,[5] where she conducted contemporary English literature seminars and led a creative writing workshop during her ten years as a writer in residence at the Centre for Gender and Women's Studies. Dorcey also taughtCreative Writing courses at theUniversity College Dublin's School for Justice.[5][3]