Finola Moorhead
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Finola Moorhead | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1947 (age 78–79) |
| Occupation | Novelist |
| Notable awards | 1991 Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction, winner |
Finola Moorhead (born 1947) is an Australian novelist, playwright, essayist, poet, and reviewer. Her topics include women and writing, switching between reality and fiction,[1] with themes of subversion and survival.[2] Moorhead participates in the women's liberation movement, and during the 1980s, she was a radical feminist.[3] As a result of a challenge she wrote a book without male characters.[4]
Moorhead and her three siblings were brought up by her single mother. She went to boarding school before deciding to study law at the University of Melbourne. Moorhead then transferred to the University of Tasmania during the protests which were occurring over the Vietnam War.[5] She graduated with a degree in arts.
Early career
Moorhead was employed as a teacher before starting her professional writing career in 1973.[3] She had begun writing the year before, after attending the Adelaide Writer's Festival and meeting the poet and campaigner Judith Wright and the writer Roger McKnight. Moorhead began writing for Meanjin, a literary journal, which also involved A.A Phillips and Clem Christesen at the time.[5] Her work also appeared in periodicals and anthologies.[6]
Moorhead has supported the women's liberation movement since the 1970s, and during the 1980s, she identified with radical feminism.[3]