Fran Lock

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NationalityBritish
GenrePoetry, lyric essay
SubjectWorking-class identity, queer identity, trauma, Traveller heritage
Fran Lock
NationalityBritish
EducationBirkbeck, University of London (PhD)
GenrePoetry, lyric essay
SubjectWorking-class identity, queer identity, trauma, Traveller heritage
Notable worksHyena! (2023)
White/ Other (2022)
Notable awardsT. S. Eliot Prize (Shortlisted, 2023)

Fran Lock is a British poet, author, and academic known for her works exploring working-class life, queer identity, and Traveller heritage.[1] In 2023, her poetry collection Hyena! was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize.[2]

Lock was born in the United Kingdom and raised with a strong Irish and Traveller cultural background. She spent part of her early childhood in Shetland before her family adopted a more itinerant lifestyle, an experience she credits with shaping her relationship to language and marginalisation.[3] She completed a practice-based PhD at Birkbeck, University of London, where her research focused on the epistolary form, contemporary poetry, mourning, and trauma.[4]

Career and critical reception

Lock has authored over ten poetry collections. Her work frequently uses themes of animality and the "feral" to examine societal marginalisation, capitalism, and gender.[5] She frequently uses the motif of the hyena and the dog to represent working-class and female scavengers trespassing in cultural spaces.[6]

Her 2022 collection White/ Other was selected as a Poetry Book Society Recommendation[7] and was featured in The Guardian's best recent poetry review roundup.[8]

From 2022 to 2023, Lock served as the Judith E. Wilson Poetry Fellow at the University of Cambridge. During her tenure, she researched feral subjectivity through the lens of the medieval bestiary.[9]

In 2023, her collection Hyena! was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize.[10]

In addition to her poetry, Lock is an associate editor at the radical arts and culture cooperative Culture Matters, and she edits the "Soul Food" column for the Communist Review.[11]

Selected works

References

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