Courtney Angela Brkic

Courtney Angela Brkic (born 1972) is a Croatian American memoirist, short story writer, and academic.

Early life

Brkic is a native of Washington, D.C. who grew up in Arlington, Virginia and graduated from Yorktown High School. She graduated from the College of William and Mary with a major in anthropology and a minor in Hispanic Studies. Before earning her MFA from New York University, Brkic lived in Bosnia, Croatia, and the Netherlands.[1]

Career

In 1996, at the age of 23, she went to eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of a Physicians for Human Rights forensic team. She spent a month helping to exhume and identify the bodies of thousands of men and boys who were massacred by Serb forces the year before.[2] She went on to work as a summary translator for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

She has taught creative writing at New York University, the Cooper Union, and Kenyon College, where she held the Richard L. Thomas Chair in Creative Writing in 2006.[3][4] She teaches at George Mason University, and lives in New York City with her husband, Phil.[5]

Awards

  • 2008 National Endowment for the Arts Literature Grant
  • 2003 Whiting Award for Fiction and Nonfiction [6]
  • Fulbright Scholarship to research women in Croatia's war-affected population
  • New York Times Fellowship.

Works

Books

  • Stillness. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2003. ISBN 978-0-374-26999-9.
  • The Stone Fields: An Epitaph for the Living. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2004. ISBN 978-0-374-20774-8. reprint. Picador. 2005. ISBN 978-0-312-42439-8.
  • The First Rule of Swimming. Little, Brown and Company. 2013. ISBN 978-0-31621-738-5.

Translations

Short stories

  • "Adiyo, Kerido". Zoetrope: All-Story. 7 (2). Summer 2003. Archived from the original on 2015-09-07. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  • "Departure". Kenyon Review. 28 (2): 4–10. Spring 2006.
  • "the offering". North American Review. 290 (6): 30–33. Dec 2006.
  • "Gathering Up the Gods". Missouri Review. 29 (4): 42–57. Winter 2006.[7]

Essays

  • "Smoldering". Washington Post Magazine: W21. 16 January 2005.
gollark: Grocery store automation might actually be a really hard case, since - as well as packages being non-rigid and in weird shapes/sizes - current grocery store designs involve customers physically interacting with products and moving them around and such.
gollark: You could just operate on a bounding box containing the entire thing, if you have a way to get that from images.
gollark: I'm not sure this is true. It should still be more efficient to have a *few* humans "preprocess" things for robotics of some kind than to have it entirely done by humans.
gollark: Those are computationally hard problems, but I would be really surprised if there wasn't *some* fast heuristic way to do them.
gollark: Except that people are somewhat inconsistent about how much inconvenience/time/whatever is worth how much money.

References

  1. Birnbaum, Robert (May 24, 2005). "Courtney Angela Brkic". Identity Theory.
  2. "Courtney Angela Brkic - Identity Theory". 24 May 2005. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-12. Retrieved 2009-12-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-08-01. Retrieved 2009-12-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Faculty and Staff: Courtney Angela Brkic". Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  6. "Courtney A. Brkic - WHITING AWARDS". Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  7. "Faculty and Staff: Courtney Angela Brkic". Retrieved 28 August 2016.
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