y separately published work icon Overland periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2023... no. 252 Spring 2023 of Overland est. 1954 Overland
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Overland 252 brings together the work of many, including writer Vivian Blaxell, Australian-Palestinian writer and educator Micaela Sahhar, and Greek-Australian anarchist poet π. o., to offer up fictional, poetic and scholarly reflections on place, resistance, memory, desire and activism—inherently political themes that have always concerned Overland writers and its readers. You'll also find new poetry from Eileen Chong, Emma Simington, Niko Chłopicki and Jini Maxwell, as well as new short fiction from Andrew Roff, Pierce Wilcox, Dorell Ben, plus loads more.' (Publication summary)

Notes

  • Only literary material within AustLit's scope individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:

    The Disappearance of a.k.a. Victor Mature by Vivian Blaxell

    Tautoga ne Tu’ura: dance of Tu’ura by  Dorell Ben

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2023 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
On Losing One’s Say : Sophie Cunningham and the Geography of Desire, Peter D. Mathews , single work essay
Sophie Cunningham's debut novel. Geography (2004) opens with its protagonist Catherine watching a green sea turtle covering its eggs on a beach in Tangalla, Sri Lanka. His anxiety about the turtle's unborn young concentrates around her own fears and insecurities: -It is hard, but necessary, to feel hopeful that It will survive- (1-2). In Sri Lanka, Catherine befriends fellow traveller Ruby. to whom she recounts the long story of her damaged life throughout the novel. Tanaka is not only the starting point of the narrative, but also of a cathartic process of healing. forgiveness and sexual discovery that shifts constantly between Australia. the United States, India and Sri Lanka in a vast geography of desire signalled by the novel's title. Today Cunningham is regarded as a preeminent ecological author. combining serious concerns about the degradation of the planet with a political awareness of the "geographical articulations' (30), as Edward Said puts it. that define the contested space created by the legacy of colonisation. These ideas are framed by an affective topology articulated long before she began writing about ecology, and it is the refinement of these ideas over time that this essay sets out to explore.' (Introduction) 
 
(p. 3-13)
An Idiosyncratic Archive : Overland 169 & the Wolstonecroft Years, Micaela Sahhar , single work essay
'The stumps under our floor are teeming and though not the cause it is nevertheless a cause for alarm, the weight o thousands of books we have partially shelved but also stacked in piles of varying consonance impossible to discard. Yet despite this number, it is the handful of books. missing through loans or misfortune, that haunt me. Though not uncommon for me particularly this hinges on an inheritance of familial experience, and I am predisposed to regard that which is missing as a great and gaping hole in which one aught never discern a silver lining, but rather a direct and literal loss, since our lives have been lived as much in the absence of things as in the presence of what has come to replace them.' (Introduction) 
 
(p. 14-24)
Concrete Terra Nullius, TT. O , single work essay
'In May 2023 6 poets, Jas H Duke, Peter Murphy, thalia, Sandy Caldow, Arjun von Caemmerer, and myself, held an exhibition of concrete poetry 'Wayword Forword' at the Nicholas Building in Melbourne, curated by Victoria Perin. It attracted a large number of people over its 3 weeks on the wall, and generated a lot of discussion about the place of concrete poetry in the annals of Australian art history and poetry.' (Introduction)
(p. 42-57)
Self-portrait as Fox with Arctic Harei"The work of white on white, the whey and milk", Damen O'Brien , single work poetry (p. 58)
Ballochi"In the evening we walk past", Eileen Chong , single work poetry (p. 59)
A Seagull Covered in Curryi"& millenials are like : born too late to own", Niko Chłopicki , single work poetry (p. 60-61)
The Worst Journey in the Worldi"started with the car not starting, helms deep", J. Taylor Bell , single work poetry (p. 62-63)
I Live in My Hometown (Not a Hundred Metres from Where)i"A flower called SELFHEAL, in Latin", Emma Simington , single work poetry (p. 64)
Stitchi"Night rains chafing", Emma Simington , single work poetry (p. 65)
Notes on Fleshi"The bowl of citrus-scented", Joel Keith , single work poetry (p. 66-67)
Where It Livesi"Fly the totem of the rabbit", Jini Maxwell , single work poetry (p. 68)
Red Honda Jazzi"Carnival red our brittle carapace charges eightlanes wide of Platzgeist Square", Mitchell Welch , single work poetry (p. 69)
T3, Andrew Roff , single work short story (p. 70-73)
Nails, Chloe Hillary , single work short story (p. 78-81)
Performance, Pierce Wilcox , single work short story (p. 82-88)
We All Dreamt of Water, Jodie How , single work prose (p. 89-92)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 9 Jan 2024 10:36:50
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