Jazz Money Jazz Money i(13194030 works by)
Gender: Female
Heritage: Aboriginal ; Aboriginal Wiradjuri
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BiographyHistory

Writer film-maker and educator of Wiradjuri and European heritage. After a period travelling across America, Asia, Europe, and Australia working in education and facilitating Indigenous ways of knowing, she settled in Sydney (on the sovereign lands of the Eora Nation).

In 2023, she was one of five First Nations delegates to attend the Auckland Writers Festival as part of the Australia Council First Nations Literature Cultural Exchange delegation.

Source include Nakata Brophy Prize (2018).

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2024 recipient Australia Council Grants, Awards and Fellowships Elevate : First Nations Storytelling
2023 recipient Australia Council Grants, Awards and Fellowships Arts Projects for Individuals and Groups $22,500    
2022 recipient The Neilma Sidney Literary Travel Fund for travel to attend the 2022 Edinburgh International Literary Festival, and to embark on a UK and Ireland tour

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Mark the Dawn St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2024 28051799 2024 selected work poetry

'A dazzling and impressive follow-up to Money's highly acclaimed debut, how to make a basket.

'We gather marks. Our bodies, our stories, our histories and our world are made of an infinite amount of visible and invisible moments. We make marks to record, to remember, to honour, to protest. We mark time, for no matter how many times the sun sets, always it rises in a new dawn.

'Jazz Money returns with her much anticipated new poetry collection to ask about all the ways we rise to a moment. mark the dawn is a celebration of community and gathering, while negotiating the legacies of intersecting histories as a queer First Nations person. These poems sing out with love declaring that, despite everything that has come before, we remain glorious, abundant, sexy, joyous and determined.' (Publication summary)

2024 winner UQP Quentin Bryce Award
Yirawulin i "the bush is glowing in the dying light", 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland , Summer no. 245 2022; (p. 87)
2020 shortlisted Queensland Poetry Festival Awards Oodgeroo Noonuccal Indigenous Poetry Prize
y separately published work icon How to Make a Basket St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2021 21861313 2021 selected work poetry

'A powerful and lyrical collection of poetry by the winner of the 2020 David Unaipon Award.

'the end of the world was marked with beautiful light we should have known

'Simmering with protest and boundless love, Jazz Money's David Unaipon Award-winning collection, how to make a basket, examines the tensions of living in the Australian colony today. By turns scathing, funny and lyrical, Money uses her poetry as an extension of protest against the violence of the colonial state, and as a celebration of Blak and queer love. Deeply personal and fiercely political, these poems attempt to remember, revision and re-voice history.

'Writing in both Wiradjuri and English language, Money explores how places and bodies hold memories, and the ways our ancestors walk with us, speak through us and wait for us.' (Publication summary)

2020 winner Queensland Literary Awards Unpublished Indigenous Writer : David Unaipon Award As 'The Space Between the Paperbark'.
Last amended 25 Aug 2023 12:23:57
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