Alison L. Black Alison L. Black i(12015577 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 Time to Remember : A Portrait of My Mother Alison L. Black , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 50 2018;

'This creative work is a personal response to difficult events. The matter of this work concerns the nature and processes of writing about universal themes of love and loss. It explores ‘Life Writing in Troubled Times’ through processes of storying an intimate and foundational relationship – a relationship which continues to have an active presence in my world and inner life. I am mourning my mother. She has been gone twelve years. Venturing into history, into what this amazing woman gave and has given to me, and as a way of mediating emotional pain, I play with concepts and expressions of time, while excavating deeper stories and past-present-future relationships. For me, and for my mother, writing has had an important role to play in processing life events and the human condition, in processing moments-years-decades of loss …and love. My mother’s own writing has supported a process of witnessing her life and lived experiences. It has offered a ‘protective workspace’ for my own contemplation and writing, magnifying my awareness of relationships and enabling a ‘being with’ and a ‘writing together’ even though she is no longer here (Walsh and Bai 2015: 26). Writing this piece sustains my connection to her in her absence. It offers a place to dwell amongst generational and everyday stories, the fragments that are known, read, or overheard. And, it creates new spaces – authentic, honouring, embodied, and generative spaces – enabling mourning, connection, responding and becoming.'  (Publication abstract)

1 I Am Keith Wright’s Daughter : Writing Things I ‘Almost’ Cannot Say Alison L. Black , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Life Writing , vol. 14 no. 1 2017; (p. 99-111)

'I am Keith Wright’s daughter: Writing Things I ‘Almost’ Cannot Say is a personal and provocative perspective. Using creative writing and storying I piece/peace together my relationship to/with my father. Always a strong and unsettling presence in my life, his unexpected death forces me toward reconciliation of tensions, identities, wounds and memories. Writing/Wrighting/Righting my stories into being, my particular points of view at points in time, and examining this conflicted yet foundational relationship, helps me remember what I have learned and helps me reclaim what matters to me. Writing the things I ‘almost’ cannot say—and have not been able to say for most of my life—is a storying in and through the dark, a storying in and through the wounding, and a storying in and to healing.'  (Publication abstract)

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