Kim Scott
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Kim Scott (born 1957) is an Australian writer of an Aboriginal ancestry. He is a descendant of Nyoongar people.
Scott was born in Perth in 1957 and he is the eldest of four siblings with a white mother and an aboriginal father.
Scott has written two novels and a children's book, and has had poetry and short stories published in a range of anthologies.[1] He began writing shortly after becoming a secondary school teacher of English. His teaching experience included working in urban, rural Australia and in Portugal. He spent some time teaching at an Aboriginal community in the north of Western Australia, where he started to research his family's history.[1]
His first novel, True Country, was published in 1993 with an edition published in a French translation in 2005. His second novel, Benang, won the WA Premiers Literary Award 1999, the Miles Franklin Award 2000, and the RAKA Kate Challis Award 2001. Both novels were influenced by his research and seemed to be semi-autobiographical. The themes of these novels have been described as, "explor[ing] the problem of self-identity faced by light-skinned Aboriginal people and examine the government's assimilationist policies during the first decades of the twentieth century".[1]
Scott was the first indigenous writer to win the Miles Franklin Award for Benang, which has since been published in translation in France and the Netherlands.
His book, Kayang and Me, was written in collaboration with Nyoongar elder, Hazel Brown, his aunt,[1] and was published in May 2005. The work is a monumental oral-based history of the author’s family, the south coast Nyoongar people of Western Australia.[citation needed]
Scott lives in Coolbellup, a southern suburb of Perth, Western Australia, with his wife and two children.
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[edit] Awards
- 1999 - Western Australian Premier's Book Awards, Fiction Award for Benang : From the Heart
- 2000 - (joint winner) Miles Franklin Literary Award for Benang : from the Heart
- 2001 - The Kate Challis RAKA Award for Creative Prose for Benang : from the Heart
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Novels
- True Country (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1993)
- Benang: from the Heart (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1999)
- Kayang and Me with Hazel Brown (Fremantle Arts Press, 2005)
- Lost (Southern Forest Arts, 2006)
[edit] Short Stories
- "An Intimate Act" in Summer Shorts by Peter Holland (Fremantle Press, 1993)
- "Registering Romance" in Summer Shorts 3 : Stories - Poems - Articles - Images by Bill Warnock, et al, (Fremantle Press, 1995)
- "Into the Light (after Hans Heysen's painting of the same name)" in Those Who Remain Will Always Remember : An Anthology of Aboriginal Writing by Anne Brewster, et al, (Fremantle Press, 2000)
- "Damaged but Persistent" in Siglo no.12 Summer (2000)
- "Capture", in Southerly (pp.24-33), vol.62 no.2 (2002)
[edit] Children's Picture Book
- The Dredgersaurus (Sandcastle Books, 2001)
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
- Singing our place little bit new: aboriginal narrativity and nation building in Kim Scott's True Country.(Critical Essay)
- Biography of Kim Scott and the review of his Benang book
- another review of the Benang book
- Australian Govenment - The Arts (Retrieved (March 31, 20008)
Persondata | |
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NAME | Scott, Kim |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Indigenous Australian novelist |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1957 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Perth, Western Australia, Australia |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |