Valerie Mason-John

Valerie Mason-John (b. Cambridge, 1962) is a contemporary Black British author, performer and conflict resolution trainer. She uses the stage name "Queenie".[1]

Biography

Mason-John spent her childhood ‘in care,’ i.e. in foster homes and childcare facilities, including the Barnardo's Orphanages in Britain with the exception of a short time spent living with her mother in her early teens. She dropped out before receiving her undergraduate degree in the eighties, but has continued to pursue post-graduate education and training into the present. Since the early nineties, she has worked as a writer, performing artist and lecturer. She received a teaching certificate, and currently conducts seminars in anger management and conflict resolution.

After eighteen months of studying philosophy and politics at Leeds University during the 1980s, Mason-John studied post graduate journalism, earned an MFA in creative writing and diploma in theatrical performance at Sussex University and The Desmond Jones School. By 2003, her interest in counseling and her ordination into the Western Buddhist Order led her into writing and performing, and on training herself and others in anger management and conflict resolution. In December, 2007, Mason-John was named Honorary Doctor of Letters by The University of East London. Mason John continues to write, work as a self-awareness trainer; she performs and lectures internationally.

Publication, broadcasting, and academic work

Mason-John’s work has appeared in UK and international journalistic and scholarly publications such as, The Guardian The Voice, Curve Magazine, The Morning Star, Pink Paper, Girl Friend Magazine and Wasafiri. She has also contributed to Half the Earth: Women’s Experience of Travel Worldwide (second edition, Pandora Rough Guide, 1990), Frauen Zimmerim Haus Europa (Papyrosa, 1991), Assaults on Convention (Cassell, 1995), Words from Word Up Café (Centerprise Publications, 1993), and Tell Tales (Tell Tales/Flipped Eye Publications, 2005).

Mason-John was the editor of Feminist Arts News from 1992 to 1997. Additionally, she was the artistic director of the London Mardi Gras from 1997 to 2000, and spent four years as the director of the Pride Arts Festival. Her television credits include freelance work for BBC, Channel 4 and Vis International TV; she has also been featured on British radio broadcasts for the BBC World Service and the regional programmes Mid Week, Woman's Hour and The Libby Purvis Show.

Published works

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.