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Professor Susan Watkins

Professor Leeds Beckett University

  • Leeds West Yorkshire

Professor Susan Watkins is an expert in contemporary women's fiction and feminist theory.

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Biography

Susan Watkins is Professor of Women's Writing in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences. She is an expert in contemporary women's writing and feminist theory, with particular research interests in dystopia, apocalyptic fiction, ageing and the future.

Susan's most recent book is about contemporary women’s post-apocalyptic writing. As well as her interests in Doris Lessing, Margaret Atwood, and contemporary women's dystopian and apocalyptic fiction, Susan is currently working on research projects on ageing and the future and ageing and the cultural industries. She welcomes proposals from prospective PhD students in these areas and in the broader field of women's fiction and feminist theory.

Susan is a founder member and former Chair of the Contemporary Women's Writing Association and previously a Co-Editor of the Journal of Commonwealth Literature. She was Director of the university's Centre for Culture and the Arts for 10 years.

Susan's main teaching at undergraduate level includes modules on Twentieth-Century Literature: Alienation and Dystopia (level 5) and Twentieth-Century Women Novelists: Feminist Theory into Practice (level 6). At MA level she teaches the modules Literature in Practice and Contemporary Apocalyptic Fictions.

Industry Expertise

Research
Education/Learning
Writing and Editing

Areas of Expertise

Contemporary Women's Dystopian and Apocalyptic Fiction
Doris Lessing
Gender
Culture
Ageing
Feminism
Literature
Margaret Atwood

Affiliations

  • Contemporary Women's Writing Association : Member

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

S2E1 Feat. Professor in the School of Cultural Studies and Humanities and Director of the Centre for Culture and the Arts at Leeds Beckett University, Susan Watkins

Tales From The Leeds Library  online

2022-03-09

Welcome back to Tales from The Leeds Library! Kicking off our second season is a fascinating conversation with Susan Watkins. We talk about her work on contemporary women's post-apocalyptic fiction and what post-apocalyptic and dystopian fiction can tell us about our current world.

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The Squid Game effect: Why do we seek out dystopias?

RTÉ  online

2021-10-07

Arguably, it’s a sign of the times. "Since the start of the pandemic, dystopia, apocalypse, infection films and games [have] just been hugely popular," explains Professor Susan Watkins from the School of Cultural Studies and Humanities at Leeds Beckett University, an expert in post-apocalyptic writing.

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‘Squid Game’: Have we become desensitized to hyper-violence?

The South African  online

2021-10-06

“Since the start of the pandemic, dystopia, apocalypse, infection films and games [have] just been hugely popular,” says Professor Susan Watkins of Leeds Beckett University.

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Articles

“Summoning Your Youth at Will”: Memory, Time, and Aging in the Work of Penelope Lively, Margaret Atwood, and Doris Lessing

Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies

2013

In a 2009 interview with Sarah Crown in the Guardian newspaper, the novelist Penelope Lively remarked that “in old age you can close your eyes and summon your youth at will. As a writer it puts one at a distinct advantage.” She added: “the idea that memory is linear … is nonsense.”1 Aging is clearly a topic of increasing interest for a number of contemporary women writers, and new critical approaches to aging and gender in this field are beginning to burgeon.

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Second World Life Writing: Doris Lessing’s Under My Skin

Journal of Southern African Studies

2016

The first volume of Doris Lessing’s official autobiography, Under My Skin (1994) returns her to memories of her African childhood, but also necessitates that she reassess the status of official and ‘fictionalised’ accounts of the past, especially her own story of the impact of colonisation and Empire on her family, herself and the African population in Southern Rhodesia. At the time Under My Skin appeared in the 1990s, feminist critics were working out the distinctive features of women’s autobiographical writing, and much more recently those of postcolonial life writing have been identified by critics such as Bart Moore-Gilbert (2009).

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Reimagining the Maternal in Jenny Diski’s and Doris Lessing’s Apocalyptic Imaginative Memoirs

Doris Lessing Studies

2018

First she refers to her unease with the conventional tropes and structures of the cancer diary, such as its use of the well-worn" journey" motif, the personification of cancer as an enemy to be fought or battled, and her own reluctant positioning, like a performer in a pantomime, by the recognised cultural scripts about cancer.

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