List of Belgian women writers
This is a list of women writers who were born in Belgium or whose writings are closely associated with that country.
A
- Christine Aventin (born 1971), best selling novelist, author of Le cœur en poche when just 15
B
- Julia Bastin (1888–1968), French-language educator, novelist, translator
- Marguerite Baulu (1870–1942), French-language novelist
- Gabrielle Bernard (1893–1963), Walloon-language poet
- Rose Berryl (born 1982), novelist
- Bessora (born 1968), French-language novelist, short story writer
- Madeleine Bourdouxhe (1906–1996), French-language novelist
- Caroline Boussart (1893–1963), French-language journalist, short story writer, non-fiction writer, feminist
- Louise Bovie (1810–1870), French-language poet, short story writer
- Renée Brock (1912–1980), French-language poet, short story writer
- Elisa Brune (1966–2018), French-language novelist, journalist
C
- Jeanne Cappe (1895–1956), French-language young adults writer, journalist, editor
- Élise Champagne (1897–1983), French-language poet, journalist[1]
- Marie Closset (1873–1952), French-language poet, pen name Jean Dominique
- Anne Cluysenaar (1936–2014), Belgian-born Irish poet
- Marguerite Coppin (1867–1931), French-language novelist, poet, feminist
- Joanna Courtmans (1811–1890), Dutch-language poet, novelist
- Coralie van den Cruyce (1796–1858), writer, feminist and poet, writing in French
D
- Saskia De Coster (born 1976), Dutch-language short story writer, novelist, columnist
- Christine D'haen (1923–2009), Dutch-language poet, biographer, translator
- Eugénie De Keyser (1918–2012), French-language essayist, novelist, educator
- Patricia De Martelaere (1957–2009), Dutch-language novelist, essayist, non-fiction philosophical works
- Els de Schepper (born 1965), Flemish actress and writer
- Gabriëlle Demedts (1909–2002), Flemish poet
- Rita Demeester (1946–1993), Dutch-language poet, novelist
- Sophie Deroisin, pen name of Marie de Romrée de Vichenet, (1909–1994), French-language novelist
- Maria Doolaeghe (1803–1884), Dutch-language poet, translator, non-fiction writer
- Louis Dubrau, pen name of Louise Janson-Scheidt, (1904–1997), French-language poet, novelist
F
- Michèle Fabien (1945–1999), French-language playwright
- Pascale Fonteneau (born 1963), French-born Belgian journalist and novelist, wrote crime fiction for Série noire
- Vera Feyder (born 1939), Belgian novelist, poet and playwright[2]
- Maud Frère (1923–1979), French-language novelist[3]
G
- Michèle Gérard (1945–1999), playwright, translator, used the pen name Michèle Fabien
- Marie Gevers (1883–1975), French-language novelist, translator, first women elected to Belgium's French-language academy
- Caroline Gravière (1821–1878), French-language novelist
- Éliane Gubin (born 1942), French-language historian, researcher, professor
H
- Eugénie Hamer (1865–after 1926), French-language peace activist and writer
- Irène Hamoir (1906–1994), French-language surrealist poet, novelist
- Jacqueline Harpman (1929–2012), French-language novelist
- Marie-Louise Haumont (1919–2012), French-language novelist
- Kristien Hemmerechts (born 1955), Dutch-language novelist, short story writer
J
- Lieve Joris (born 1953), non-fiction Dutch-language writer specializing in travel in Africa and the Middle East
L
- Rachida Lamrabet (born 1970), Dutch-language novelist, short story writer, playwright[4]
- Ariane Le Fort (born 1960), French-language journalist, novelist[5]
- Suzanne Lilar (1901–1992), French-language journalist, essayist, novelist, playwright, feminist
- Rosalie Loveling (1834–1875), Dutch-language poet, novelist, essayist
- Virginie Loveling (1836–1923), younger sister of Rosalie (above), Dutch-language poet, novelist, essayist and children's writer
M
- Malika Madi (born 1967), French-language novelist of Algerian origin
- Nicole Malinconi (born 1946), French-language novelist
- Françoise Mallet-Joris (1930–2016), French-language novelist
- Cécile Miguel (1921–2001), French-language writer and artist[6]
- Capucine Motte (born 1971), Belgian-born French novelist
- Chantal Mouffe (born 1943), political theorist, academic and writer
- Jeanine Moulin (1912–1998), poet, literary scholar
N
- Alice Nahon (1896–1933), Dutch-language poet
- Marie Nizet (1859–1922), French-language poet
- Amélie Nothomb (born 1966), highly successful French-language novelist, short story writer, several works translated into English
- Colette Nys-Mazure (born 1939), French-language poet, novelist, short story writer, playwright, several works translated into English[7]
O
- Barbara Ogier (1648–1720), Flemish playwright
P
- Marie Parent (1853–1934), Belgian journal editor, temperance activist, feminist and suffragist
- Sophie Podolski (1953–1974), French-language poet and graphic artist
- Anne Provoost (born 1964), Dutch-language novelist, essayist and short story writer, often writing for young adults
- Maria Pypelinckx (1538–1608), Dutch-language writer
R
- Hilda Ram (1858–1901), Flemish writer
- Céline Renooz (1840–1928), non-fiction scientific works on evolution, epistemology, historiography
- Dominique Rolin (1913–2012), French-language novelist
- Maria Rosseels (1916–2005), Dutch-language journalist, novelist, essayist, critic
- Angélique de Rouillé (1756–1840), French-language letter writer
S
- Fanny Zampini Salazar (1853–1931), Belgian-born Italian writer and lecturer
- Aline Sax (born 1984), Flemish young people's novelist
- Carla Serena (1820–1884), writer and explorer
- Isabelle Spaak (born 1960), novelist, non-fiction writer
- Lize Spit (born 1988), Flemish novelist
- Lucienne Stassaert (born 1936), Dutch-language poet, playwright[8]
- Irène Stecyk (born 1937), French language novelist[9]
U
- Chika Unigwe (born 1974), Nigerian-born, Belgian-immigrant novelist, short story writer, poet, children's writer, writes in Dutch and English
V
- Marianne Van Hirtum (1925–1988), French-language surrealist poet
- Monika van Paemel (born 1945), Dutch-language (often autobiographical) novelist[10]
- Louise van den Plas (1877–1968), suffragist and French-language writer
- Sylvia Vanden Heede (born 1961), Flemish children's writer
- Hilde Vandermeeren (born 1970), Dutch-language children's writer, newspaper editor, novelist
- Annelies Verbeke (born 1976), Dutch-language writer, successful novelist, also short story writer, playwright
- Stephanie Vetter (1884–1974), Dutch-born Belgian novelist, short story writer, women's rights advocate
- Maria de Villegas de Saint-Pierre (1870–1941), French-language writer and nurse
W
- Carla Walschap (born 1932), Dutch-language novelist, evoking lesbianism in De Eskimo en de roos[11]
- Monique Watteau (born 1929), acclaimed French-language novelist, illustrator
- Sandrine Willems (born 1968), French-language writer, television documentary director
- Évelyne Wilwerth (born 1947), French-language poet, novelist, short story writer, playwright
- Liliane Wouters (1930–2016), poet, playwright, essayist, several works translated into English
Y
- Marguerite Yourcenar (1903–1987), French-language novelist, essayist, translator, first woman elected to the Académie française
References
- Gubin, Eliane (2006). Dictionnaire des femmes belges: XIXe et XXe siècles (in French). pp. 98–99. ISBN 2873864346.
- "Vera Feyder". La moisson des auteurs (in French).
- Makward, Christiane P; Cottenet-Hage, Madeleine (1996). Dictionnaire littéraire des femmes de langue française: de Marie de France à Marie NDiaye (in French). pp. 251–53. ISBN 2865376761.
- "Lamrabet, Rachida". Espace créateur (in French). Fondation Banque Populaire pour l'Education et la Culture. Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
- "Ariane Le Fort" (in French). Service du Livre Luxembourgeois.
- "Cécile et André Miguel" (PDF) (in French). Service du Livre Luxembourgeois. 1990.
- "Colette Nys-Mazure" (PDF). Dossiers littérature française de Belgique (in French). Service du Livre Luxembourgeois.
- "Lucienne Stassaert". Poetry International Rotterdam. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- "Stecyk, Irène" (in French). Association des Écrivains belges de langue française.
- "Monika van Paemel". Nederlands letterenfonds. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- "Dutch and Flemish Literature". glbtq. Archived from the original on 1 April 2009. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
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