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Renate Stendhal | |
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Born | 29 January 1944 Stendal, Germany |
Occupation | writer, writing coach, provost |
Nationality | German |
Genre | Fiction, non-fiction |
Subject | Feminism, women, eroticism, children's literature |
Website | |
www |
Renate Stendhal (born Renate Neumann, January 29, 1944) is a German counselor [1] and author of nonfiction and fiction [2] including three books co-written with author Kim Chernin, [3] her life companion. [4] Many of her books focus on the erotic and creative empowerment of women. Born in Germany, she has lived for almost twenty years in Paris. She presently lives northern California. [4]
During her school years in Berlin and Hamburg, Renate Stendhal pursued studies of music, singing, painting, and dancing. She majored in literature at Hamburg University, then moved to Paris in 1966 to focus on classical dance. After an engagement at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, she returned to Paris in 1970 and joined an experimental theater group. From 1975 to 1982, she worked in Paris as a cultural correspondent for German radio and press ( Frankfurter Rundschau et al.) – an occupation she picked up again in 2005, writing cultural reviews for the international magazine Scene4. In Paris, she also worked for many years as a personal assistant for surrealist painter Meret Oppenheim.
With the beginning of the French and German feminist movements, Renate Stendhal became an activist and co-created (with Danish painter Maj Skadegaard) the first feminist multimedia show in Europe, “In the Beginning . . . of the End: A Voyage of Women Becoming” (1980). [5] A year later, the show was recorded on film by Studio D of the National Film Board of Canada and shown at women's festivals and international film festivals. While touring with the film across Europe from 1980 to 1983, Renate Stendhal started giving workshops and lectures on women's creative and erotic empowerment. Her essays and articles appeared in major feminist magazines including Feministische Studien, EMMA, [6] Sinister Wisdom, WomanSpirit, and Trivia: Voices of Feminism.
During the 1980s, she became the first German translator of feminist authors Susan Griffin, Audre Lord, Adrienne Rich, and others. In 1984, she accompanied Audre Lorde as a translator on a reading tour of Germany and Switzerland. [7] She translated Gertrude Stein's only mystery novel, Blood on the Dining-Room Floor, [8] into German, keine keiner: ein Kriminalroman (Zürich 1985), and in 1989 created a photo-biography with parallel visual and textual readings of Stein's life, Gertrude Stein: In Words and Pictures. [9] The English edition (Algonquin Books, 1994) earned a Lambda Award. In 2009, the photo-biography was republished and served as an inspiration for the exhibition "Seeing Gertrude Stein: Five Stories", at the Contemporary Jewish Museum of San Francisco and The National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. [10] Renate Stendhal was involved in the educational programming surrounding the show and the parallel exhibition "The Steins Collect: Matisse, Picasso and the Parisian Avant-Garde", at SFMOMA. [11] Her blog, quotinggertrudestein, followed the preparations, the "Summer of Stein" and the aftermath of the epochal exhibitions. [12]
Since her move to California in 1986, she earned an MA in clinical psychology and a Ph.D. in spiritual psychology, but chose not to pursue a license as a therapist. Instead, she chose a spiritual path, getting ordained as a minister by AIWP, the Association for the Integration of the Whole Person, practicing as an interpersonal, existential counselor. In 2005, she became a provost at the University for Integrative Learning, guiding students through MA and Ph.D. programs that reward students for their lifelong learning.
In the States, Renate Stendhal published Sex and Other Sacred Games (Times Books, 1989), co-authored with her life companion, author Kim Chernin, with whom she also co-authored the portrait of an opera singer, Cecilia Bartoli: The Passion of Song (HarperCollins, 1997). She wrote and illustrated a novel for young adults, The Grasshopper's Secret: A Magical Tale (EdgeWork Books, 2002), and continued her reflections on women and eros with True Secrets of Lesbian Desire: Keeping Sex Alive in Long-Term Relationships (North Atlantic Books, 2003), originally published as Love's Learning Place: Truth as Aphrodisiac in Women's Long-Term Relationships (EdgeWork Books, 2002). Her most recent collaboration with Kim Chernin is Lesbian Marriage: A Love & Sex Forever Kit (2014).
Renate Stendhal's work, articles, and essays have appeared internationally in anthologies and diverse media; in the United States in Lambda Literary Online, The Huffington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, Ms. Magazine, The Advocate, Chicago Quarterly Review, Tikkun Magazine, Four Seasons Magazine, Epochalips, The Daily Beast, Travel Magazine, Centre Pompidou, online Archived 2018-10-17 at the Wayback Machine, Emma Magazine, and many others. In 2000, Kim Chernin and she founded a women’s publishing collective, EdgeWork Books. [13] She co-authored The Extraordinary Life of An Ordinary Man, with Al Hirshen (2019).
Her latest publication is the award-winning Parisian memoir à clef, Kiss Me Again, Paris: A Memoir.