Mykaela Saunders Mykaela Saunders i(12974692 works by)
Gender: Female
Heritage: Aboriginal Dharug ; Aboriginal ; Lebanese
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Works By

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1 Sweet Country Mykaela Saunders , 2024 single work essay
— Appears in: Shapeshifting : First Nations Lyric Nonfiction 2024;
1 Poetic Tapestries : An Ambitious Multi-vocal Project Mykaela Saunders , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 464 2024; (p. 49-50)

— Review of Woven : First Nations Poetic Conversations from the Fair Trade Project 2024 anthology poetry

'The concept of Woven, a Fair Trade project from Red Room Poetry, seems simple but the reality is complex: one local First Nations poet is paired with another First Nations poet from another continent, and together they create a poem. This is an ambitious undertaking for the poets themselves and especially for the editor, Māori poet Anne-Marie Te Whiu, who should be commended for stewarding this project through the last few tumultuous years. The resulting book is a gorgeous tapestry of weavings from some fine poets.' (Introduction)

1 Debut Spotlight : 5 Questions with Mykaela Saunders Mykaela Saunders , 2024 single work column
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , March 2024;
1 10 y separately published work icon Always Will Be : Stories of Goori Sovereignty from the Futures of the Tweed Mykaela Saunders , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2024 27136924 2024 selected work short story science fiction fantasy

'From the 2022 David Unaipon winner comes an outstanding and timely collection of speculative fiction imagining futures where Indigenous sovereignty is fully reasserted.

'In this stunningly inventive and thought-provoking collection, Mykaela Saunders poses the question—what might country, community and culture look like in the Tweed if Gooris reasserted their sovereignty?

'Each of the stories in Always Will Be is set in its own future version of the Tweed. In one, a group of girls plot their escape from a home they have no memory of entering. In another, two men make a final visit to the country they love as they contemplate a new life in a faraway place. Saunders imagines different scenarios for how the local Goori community might reassert sovereignty - reclaiming country, exerting full self-determination, or incorporating non-Indigenous people into the social fabric - while practising creative, ancestrally approved ways of living with changing climates.

'Epic in scope, and with a diverse cast of characters, Always Will Be is the ground-breaking winner of the 2022 David Unaipon Award. This is a forward-thinking collection that refuses cynicism and despair, and instead offers entertaining stories that celebrate Goori ways of being, knowing, doing - and becoming' (Publication summary)

1 Blackfella Futurism : Speculative Fiction Grounded in Grassroots Sovereignty Politics Mykaela Saunders , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Handbook of Cofuturisms 2023; (p. 100-110)
1 Future Tweed : Envisioning the Possibilities of Bundjalung Country, Community and Culture through Speculative Fiction Mykaela Saunders , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Handbook of Australian Indigenous Peoples and Futures 2023; (p. 322-335)
1 The Goodness of Their Hearts Authors Mykaela Saunders , 2023 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , December vol. 82 no. 4 2023; (p. 34-38) Meanjin Online 2023;
1 As I Sat Sadly by Her Side Mykaela Saunders , 2023 single work short story
— Appears in: Into Your Arms : Nick Cave’s Songs Reimagined 2023; (p. 239-246)
1 Think of the Children! Mykaela Saunders , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , June 2023;

— Review of Praiseworthy Alexis Wright , 2023 single work novel
1 Communing with Uncle Kev Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Against Disappearance : Essays on Memory 2022;
1 A Road Warrior Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , September 2022;
1 Stories of Our Dysfunction Have Been Greatly Exaggerated Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , September 2022;

'One night a few years ago our neighbour Lisa knocks on our door. Her two young daughters are with her and I can tell something is up. The oldest, Sally, has just started primary school and the youngest, Patty, is a couple of years behind. We normally talk every day – mostly it’s the girls chatting away to me while I work out the front – but I haven’t seen them around much over the last few weeks. I’ve been worried about them and we are all happy to see each other.' (Introduction)

1 Everywhen Against ‘The Power of Now’ Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , no. 76 2022; (p. 115-125)

'THERE ARE AS many ways of thinking about time as there are cultures, but I’m going to talk about the one I know best and contrast it with the one that we’ve been drowning in ever since colonial capitalism started pouring it over us in 1788.'(Introduction)

1 Overture Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: This All Come Back Now 2022; (p. 1-22)
1 Skin in the Game Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , March 2022;

— Review of Another Day in the Colony Chelsea Watego , 2021 selected work essay

'I’ve worked in Aboriginal education since 2003, in different institutions and teaching capacities, and I’ve always ignored the personal impacts of my job, stuffing them down and getting on with things the way my stoic old people always did. If I ever had to talk about the harm that educational institutions cause, I’d just focus on the cultural and communal impacts, particularly on my students. But reading Munanjali and South Sea Islander Professor Chelsea Watego’s Another Day in the Colony (UQP) allowed me to admit the personal slights and to feel them rather than repressing them.'  (Introduction)

1 The Girls Home Mykaela Saunders , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: Unlimited Futures 2022; (p. 223)
1 7 y separately published work icon This All Come Back Now Mykaela Saunders (editor), St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2022 23603716 2022 anthology short story science fiction fantasy

'A world-first collection of blackfella speculative fiction from well-known and emerging First Nations writers. The first-ever anthology of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander speculative fiction – written, curated, edited and designed by blackfellas, for blackfellas and about blackfellas. In these stories, some writers are summoning ancestral spirits from the past, while others are looking straight down the barrel of potential futures, which always end up curving back around to hold us up from behind. Dazzling, imaginative and unsettling, This All Come Back Now centres and celebrates communities, cultures and country.' (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon Goori Futurism : Envisioning the Sovereignty of Country, Community and Culture in the Tweed Mykaela Saunders , Sydney : 2021 28142894 2021 thesis

'Goori Futurism is a new genre of speculative fiction that envisions Goori sovereignty in various futures in the Tweed/Bundjalung country, using Blackfella Futurism themes and tropes. This thesis has two components. ALWAYS WILL BE: stories of Goori sovereignty, from the future(s) of the Tweed, the creative component of this project, is a short story collection comprised of ten short Goori Futurism stories. The critical component is an exegesis in three parts. The overarching question that the whole thesis asks is: what might our country, community and culture look like in a Future Tweed, given the reassertion of Goori sovereignty? ALWAYS WILL BE offers ten different answers to this question, and the exegesis considers the research and writing that led to the answers. The exegesis first defines Goori Futurism, then it traces Goori Futurism’s origins, lineage and goals. Next, the exegesis introduces The Goori Futurism Research Framework as made up of three reading and writing frames: Politics – Goori Sovereignty, Setting – Future Tweed and Genre – Blackfella Futurism. The third section is ALWAYS WILL BE, and the stories are tied together by politics, setting and genre: each of the stories in this collection explore different expressions of Goori Sovereignty; all of the stories are set in the Tweed, in different versions of the Future, with various climate scenarios, population dynamics and political structures; and each story responds to the prevailing themes and tropes within the Blackfella Futurism genre. Finally, the exegesis reflects on the ways that each of the stories are products of The Goori Futurism Research Framework. This thesis, comprised of the stories in ALWAYS WILL BE and the scholarly writing in the exegesis combined, initiates the genre of Goori Futurism, articulates a philosophy and aesthetics of the genre and delineates its boundaries while resisting prescriptive genre protocols.'

Source: University of Sydney Repository.

1 Everywhen in Everything : Reading Carpentaria like an Aboriginal Writer Mykaela Saunders , 2021 single work criticism
— Appears in: Reading Like an Australian Writer 2021;
1 Choice Cuts i "my blood is worth bottling, so I’m told as though", Mykaela Saunders , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , November 2021; Overland , Summer no. 245 2022; (p. 88-90) Best of Australian Poems 2022 2022; (p. 28)
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