'In ancient Greece ekphrasis was understood more broadly than in the contemporary world, indicating a complex genealogy for this term that encompasses so much fine poetry as well as many other forms of writing. For the ancients, the best ekphrastic poetry was prized because it presented an often dramatic picture in words, enabling the reader to ‘see’ and respond immediately to what was being described or evoked. Ekphrastic poetry provided a way of allowing readers or listeners to appreciate the imagistic and sometimes narrative content of poetry almost as if they might be looking at the object or objects being written about.' (Source : Editorial introduction)
Only literary material by Australian authors individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:
Pyroglyphs by Philip Gross
William Cordova: Machu Picchu after Dark by Stephen Burt
MRI by Katharine Coles
Nosferatu’s Serenade by Dana Gioia
The Rye by Fiona Sampson
Naive Conviction by Mark Yakich
The Hanged Man by Tony Barnstone
Bouquet de fleurs au napperon brodé by Moira Egan
Six Dances by Anne Boyer
An Extra Oyster for the Doctors by Elizabeth Smither
Pablo Picasso: Lithograph: David and Bathsheba by Tom Daley
Closed Captioning for the Black Anima by Airea D Matthews and Ladan Osman
The Photograph Snapped at the Mosque by Sholeh Wolpé
Still Life with Lazarus at the Museum by Joel Long
poems from Fortuna by Megan Kaminski
Calling All Shadows by Charity Gingerich
Autumnal Cannibalism by Kristin LaFollette
Anatomy for the Blind by Andy Brown
after infatuation—ross bleckner—oil on linen by Katie Prince
Lament by Sam Keenan