Inga Gaile
Appearance
Inga Gaile (born 29 June 1976 Riga, Latvia) is a Latvian poet, novelist, and playwright.[1][2][3]
Biography
Gaile has written poetry collection for adults and children. Her works often focus on feminist issues and as well as issues related to different stigmatised groups. She has won the Latvian Literature Award and the Poetry Days Festival prize. Gaile has translated poetry from Russian into Latvian, and her poems have also been translated into various languages including English, Estonian, German, Swedish, Lithuanian, and Bengali.[4][5][6] She is President of Latvia PEN.[7]
Activism
Inga Gaile is an prominent member of the Latvian feminist movement and is a founder of the stand-up comedy group "Sieviešu stendaps/Women's Stand-Up". [6]
Works
Poetry
- Laiks bija iemīlējies (Time Had Grown Enamoured). Rīga: Pētergailis, 1999.
- Raudāt nedrīkst smieties (Cry Not Laugh). Rīga: Nordik, 2004.
- Kūku Marija (Maria, the Cake Killer). Rīga: Orbita, 2007
- Migla (Fog). Rīga: Mansards, 2012.
- Vai otrā grupa mani dzird? (Can the Back Row Hear Me?). Rīga: Liels un mazs, 2014.
- Lieldienas (Easter). Rīga: Neputns, 2018.
Prose
- Stikli (Glass Shards). Rīga: Dienas Grāmata, 2016.
- Neredzamie (Invisible). Rīga: Zvaigzne ABC, 2018.
Plays
- Āda (Skin). Rīga: Dirty Deal Teatro, 2011.
- Mūsu Silvija debesīs (Our Sylvia, Who Art in Heaven). Rīga: Ģertrūdes ielas teātris, 2013.
- Trauki (The Dishes), in collaboration with Marta E. Martinsone. Rīga: Dirty Deal Teatro, 2014.
Works in translation
- 30 Questions People Don’t Ask: The Selected Poems of Inga Gaile. Translated in English by Ieva Lešinska. Warrensburg, Missouri: Pleiades Press; 2018. ISBN 9780997099423
- Klaas (Glass Shards). Translated into Estonian by Aive Mandel. Tallinn: Looming, 2018.
Awards
- The Annual Latvian Literary Award for Can the Back Row Hear Me?, 2015.
- Prose Readings Award for the short story Piena ceļi/ Milky Ways, 2012.
- Latvju Teksti Magazine Award for Fog, 2012.
- Ojārs Vācietis Award for Fog, 2012.
- Poetry Days Award for Cake Mary, 2007.
- Ojārs Vācietis Award for Cry Not Laugh, 2004.
- Anna Dagda Foundation Award for Cry Not Laugh, 2004.
- Klāvs Elsbergs Award for Time Had Grown Enamoured, 1999.
References
- ^ "Inga Gaile: Mani stāsti izaug no personīgajiem cīniņiem". LA.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 2019-08-02.
- ^ "Atjaunojot asinsriti. Inga Gaile "Piena ceļi"". LA.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 2019-08-02.
- ^ ""Mansards" izdod Ingas Gailes stāstus "Piena ceļi"". TVNET (in Latvian). 2018-10-15. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
- ^ "Inga Gaile - Literature Across Frontiers". www.lit-across-frontiers.org.
- ^ "Pleiades Press | 30 Questions People Don't Ask: The Selected Poems of Inga Gaile".
- ^ a b "Latvian Literature". www.latvianliterature.lv.
- ^ "Inga Gaile – FCNC".
External links
Categories:
- 1976 births
- Living people
- People from Riga
- Latvian writers
- 20th-century Latvian poets
- 20th-century Latvian women writers
- 21st-century Latvian poets
- 21st-century Latvian women writers
- 21st-century dramatists and playwrights
- Latvian dramatists and playwrights
- Women dramatists and playwrights
- Latvian writer stubs