Amina Gautier

Amina Gautier is an American writer and academic. She is the author of three short story collections, many individual stories, as well as works of literary criticism.

Amina Gautier
Amina Gautier

Early life and education

Gautier was born and raised in New York. After participating in Prep for Prep, she attended the Nightingale Bamford School before graduating from Northfield Mount Hermon.[1] She then went to Stanford, where she earned bachelor's and master's degrees in English literature. She continued her education at the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned a master's degree and a Ph.D. in English literature.

She held a Mellon Minority Undergraduate Fellowship at Stanford University, a Fontaine Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, a Mitchem Dissertation Fellowship at Marquette University, and a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Washington University in St. Louis.

Career

Gautier is a scholar of 19th century American literature. She has written criticism of the nineteenth century American authors Charles W. Chesnutt, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Elleanor Eldridge, Benjamin Franklin, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Walt Whitman. Her critical essays and reviews have appeared in African American Review, Belles Lettres, Daedalus, Journal of American History, Libraries and Culture, Nineteenth Century Contexts and Whitman Noir. She has received fellowships from the Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA), the Social Science Research Council and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation.

Writer

Gautier has published more than 85 short stories. Her fiction has appeared in a wide variety of magazines and story collections, and some of her stories have been reprinted in anthologies.

Her collection of short stories, Now We Will Be Happy, won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize,[2] and her second collection, At-Risk,[3] won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction.[4]

In 2016, Gauthier published her third short story collection, The Loss of All Lost Things (Elixir Press).[5]

Awards

Gautier has been the recipient of the Crazyhorse Prize,[6] the Danahy Fiction Prize, the Jack Dyer Prize, the William Richey Prize, the Schlafly Microfiction Award and the Lamar York Prize in Fiction.

Teacher

Gautier has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Marquette University, Saint Joseph's University and Washington University in St. Louis. Most recently, Gautier taught at DePaul University. In fall 2014, she joined the faculty in the MFA program at the University of Miami.[7]

gollark: It will work fine on a neural interface. I think.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/ZfhJz6n4
gollark: The traffic light system will run fine on that.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> The traffic light software is *kind of* like that.
gollark: <@263606921586671616> How do you KNOW you're the king of lua programming?

References

  1. Amina Gautier's website
  2. "Prairie Schooner Book Prize past winners: Now We Will Be Happy". Prairie Schooner
    - "Now We Will Be Happy", Publishers Weekly.
    - "Jaquira Díaz interviews Amina Gautier", Los Angeles Review of Books, November 25, 2015
    - "NOW WE WILL BE HAPPY by Amina Gautier", Kirkus Reviews, September 16, 2014
  3. Debra Bendis, "At-Risk, by Amina Gautier" review, Christian Century, January 8, 2014.
  4. Richard Thomas, "Review of At-risk, by Amina Gautier", The Nervous Breakdown, October 15, 2012. Archived October 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  5. Antonio Ruiz-Camacho, "Book Review: Short Stories", New York Times, April 1, 2016
    - Jaquira Díaz, "A Year in Reading: Jaquira Díaz", The Millions, December 11, 2015
    - Amy O'Loughlin, "The Loss of All Lost Things", Foreword Reviews, May 20, 2016
  6. "Amina Gautier" interviewed by Derek Alger, PIF Magazine June 1, 2012
  7. Jeffrey Condran, "Now We Will Be Happy by Amina Gautier", Necessary Fiction, January 11, 2016. Archived April 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
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