Francine Cunningham
Indigenous writer, artist, and educator
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Francine Cunningham (born 1984) is an Indigenous writer, artist, and educator. She is Cree and Métis.[1]
Her debut novel, On/Me, was nominated for the BC and Yukon Book Prize for The Jim Deva Prize for Writing that Provokes. As well as Indigenous Voices Award for a poetry book in English and was nominated for a 2021 City of Vancouver Book Award.[2]
Personal life
Cunningham is originally from Calgary, Alberta.[3] She currently lives in Strathmore, Alberta. She lived in Vancouver, British Columbia for over 15 years.[3]
Career
Cunningham graduated from Keyano College with a diploma in Visual and Performing Arts with conservatory style training in acting.[4] She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Theatre and Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia.[3]
In 2014, She participated in the Indigenous Writing Studio at the Banff Arts Center and placed second in the Our Story: Aboriginal Arts and Stories contest.[3]
At present, she runs creative writing and art workshops as a guest in First Nation's reserves across Canada.[2]
Her collection God Isn't Here Today won the 2023 ReLit Award for short fiction.[5]
Publications
Anthology contributor
- Boobs: Women Explore What It Means to Have Breasts, published March 15, 2016 by Caitlin Press Inc.
- "To plant life (all)" in Watch Your Head, published 2020 by Coach House Books[6]
- "Still, Small Voice" in The Best Canadian Essays 2017, published by TightRope Books
- "A conversation with a massage therapist" in #NotYourPrincess: Voices of Native American Women, published 2017 by Annick Press
- "How to teach hard topics: The Native Youth Program and Indian Residential Schools as a case study" in Transforming Our Practices: Indigenous Art, Pedagogies, and Philosophies, published in 2017 by The National Art Education Association
Artwork
- "Language," Red Rising Magazine (2018)
- Kimiwan Magazine (2013)
Books
- On/Me, published January 21, 2020 by Caitlin Press Inc.
- God Isn't Here Today, published May 10, 2022 by Invisible Publishing[7]
Poetry
- Room Magazine: Indigenous Brilliance (2021)[8]
- Room Magazine: Growing Room (2021)[9]
- "I miss the smell of cooking," Koffler Digital: A Matter of Taste exhibition (2021)[10]
- "Coven, A Spell to Bring My Mom Back From The Dead," Poetry is Dead (2018)
- "Caged," Word and Colour (2017)[11]
- "Star Matter," Red Rising Magazine (2017)
- "Whales Can't save us all but they try," Word and Colour (2017)[12]
- "Through Ribs and Things, Build up, Untitled," The This Magazine (2017)[13]
- "Water is Spirit Love Medicine Balance" in Gatherings: Water Anthology published by Theytus Press (2016)
- "Resistance," Word and Colour (2016)[14]
- "A Conversation With a Massage Therapist," The Maynard (2016)[15]
- "For Your Darkness, Storyteller," Echolocation Magazine (2015)
- "A selection of four poems," Hamilton Arts and Letters (2015)[16]
- "The Road," The Ubyssey (2010)
Short creative nonfiction
- "Half-Breed," The New Quarterly (2019)[17]
- Edna Staebler Personal Essay Contest Shortlist
- "Transcendence," The Quebec Writers Federation (2017)[18]
- "Still, Small Voice," The Malahat Review (2016)[19]
Short fiction
- "God Isn't Here Today," Humber Literary Review (Spring/Summer 2021)[20]
- "Asleep Till You're Awake," The Malahat Review (2020)[21]
- "Starting A Religion," Grain Magazine (2018)[22]
- Short Grain Contest: 1st Place Winner
- "Complex 2675: Issue One," Joyland Magazine (2017)[23]
- "Last," In Shades Magazine (2017)[24]
- "Secrets like Lead," Litro Magazine (2016)[25]
- "Nanosim#694" (Twitter fiction)[26]
- "The Places In-Between," The Quilliad Magazine (2015)
- "Pornorama," The Puritan (2015)[27]
- "Slips," Active Fiction Project, a chose your own adventure story on the streets of Vancouver (2015)[28]
Other
- THAT'S AWSM Teen Reality TV show airing on APTN (Television) (2018)[29][30][31][32][33][34]
- "The Berg," Telus StoryHive (Web-Series)(2017)[35]
- Winner 10K Web-Series Edition
- Royal BC Museum, Seeing the Museum Through an Indigenous Lens: Spring Issue, Curious Magazine (Guest Editor)(2017)
- International Innovation Pedagogy in a Digital World. Research summary from Citizens of Tomorrow team. (Article) (2016)
- "Birdie," Prism Literary Magazine (Book Review)(2016)[36]
- "Faerie," Prism Literary Magazine (Book Review)(2016)[37]
- "Author Note," The Town Crier (Non-Fiction) (2016)[38]
- Nineteen Questions, Interview With Author Lee Maracle. (Interview) (2014)
- "Who I (really) am: An exploration of Urban Aboriginal Identity through short film," The Canadian Art Teacher Journal (2014)
- Mixed Tribes zine with some Aboriginal youth at The Museum of Anthropology (2013)[39]
- A Piece of Me with The Native Youth Program at The Museum of Anthropology (2011)[40]
Awards
| Year | Award | Work | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Our Story: Aboriginal Arts and Writing Challenge | "2822" | Second Place | [1] |
| 2017 | Hnatyshyn Foundation: REVEAL Indigenous Art Awards | Winner | [42] | |
| Telus StoryHive's 10K Web-Series Edition | "The Berg" | Winner | [35] | |
| 2018 | Grain Magazine: Short Grain Contest | "Starting A Religion" | Winner | |
| 2019 | Indigenous Voices Award, Unpublished Prose Category | Teenage Asylums | Winner | |
| The Malahat Review's Far Horizon's Fiction Award | "Glitter Like Herpes" | Shortlist | ||
| The New Quarterly's Edna Staebler Personal Essay Contest | "Half-Breed" | Shortlist | ||
| 2020 | BC and Yukon Book Prize, Jim Deva Prize for Writing that Provokes | On/Me | Nominated | [43] |
| CV2 Lina Chartrand Poetry Award | "Blood Quantum" | Winner | ||
| Indigenous Voices Award | On/Me | Nominated | ||
| 2021 | The Malahat Review's Fiction Open Season Award | "Late Nights Over Mayo" | Shortlist | |
| 2023 | Carol Shields Prize for Fiction | God Isn't Here Today | Longlist | [44] |
| ReLit Award | Winner | [5] |