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・ Kim Dong-hae
・ Kim Dong-hee
・ Kim Dong-hee (Go player)
・ Kim Dong-hyeon
・ Kim Dong-hyun (bobsleigh)
・ Kim Dong-hyun (disambiguation)
・ Kim Dong-hyun (footballer, born 1984)
・ Kim Dong-in
・ Kim Cheol-min
・ Kim Cheol-seok
・ Kim Cheol-woong
・ Kim Cheon-heong
・ Kim Cheong-gi
・ Kim Cheong-sim
・ Kim Cheong-yong
Kim Chernin
・ Kim Chi-gon
・ Kim Chi-ha
・ Kim Chi-won
・ Kim Chi-woo
・ Kim Chin-kyung
・ Kim Chiu
・ Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls
・ Kim Chol
・ Kim Chol-ho
・ Kim Chol-jin
・ Kim Chol-man
・ Kim Chol-su
・ Kim Chon-hae
・ Kim Chon-man


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Kim Chernin : ウィキペディア英語版
Kim Chernin

Kim Chernin (born May 7, 1940, Bronx, New York) is a Lambda Literary Award-winning American fiction and nonfiction writer, feminist, poet, and memoirist. She has published fiction, non-fiction and poetry.
== Biography ==

Kim Chernin was born on May 7, 1940, in the Bronx, New York. Her parents, Rose Chernin and Paul Kusnitz, were Russian-born Jewish immigrants. Rose Chernin was an organizer for the Communist Party and founded the Los Angeles Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born. Paul Kusnitz was a teacher of Marxism for the Communist Party. . Chernin's childhood was influenced by the death of her older sister, Nina, to Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Shortly after Nina's death, the Kusnitz family relocated to Los Angeles to be near relatives. Her mother resumed full-time work as a party organizer and in 1951 made national headline news when she was arrested for "advocating the overthrow of the government." Rose Chernin was later called before the House Un-American Activities Committee for her work as a party organizer. The U.S. government tried unsuccessfully to denaturalize her and deprive her of citizenship for such activities.〔(Jewish Women's Encyclopedia ) accessed August 18, 2009〕
Kim Chernin was active as an organizer of the LYL Labor Youth League and, upon graduation from high school, traveled to Moscow for the Seventh World Festival of Youth and Students. In her memoir, ''In My Mother's House,'' Chernin writes:
Chernin moved to Berkeley to attend the University of California, Berkeley and married David Netboy at the age of 18. In 1963, her only child, Larissa, was born while she was studying at Trinity College, Dublin.〔(Jewish Women's Encyclopedia ) accessed August 17, 2009〕 She divorced seven years later, subsequently also marrying and divorcing Robert Cantor,〔 before settling into a long-term relationship with her life-companion Renate Stendhal, with whom she co-wrote ''Sex and Other Sacred Games'', ''Cecilia Bartoli: The Passion of Song'' and ''Lesbian Marriage: A Love & Sex Forever Kit''. She currently lives in Point Reyes, California, where she writes and works as a pastoral counselor. She was a guest instructor at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute.〔(HarperCollins Publishers Biography ), accessed August 17, 2009〕 She has been featured on radio, including National Public Radio.

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