Biographie de Claire Robson
Claire Robson's work as a writer, editor, and educator has spanned four decades and a variety of professional contexts, both formal and informal. Currently she is writer-in-residence for Quirk-e (the Queer Imaging & Riting Kollective for Elders), a federally funded arts-engaged community group in Vancouver. Her memoir, Love in Good Time, was published in 2003, and she edited Outside Rules, a collection of short fiction about nonconformist youth, in 2007.
She was named Pink Triangle Press Writer of the Year in 2006. She received her PhD from the University of British Columbia in 2011, having won a number of awards including the Lynch History Prize, the Dean's Award, and the Joseph Katz Memorial Scholarship for work in anti-oppressive education.