'What is generally understood by the term ‘lyric poetry’? The prominent lyric theorist Jonathan Culler (99), proposes that lyric poetry is seen as the expression of a single consciousness in figurative language and usually takes the form of a short poem voicing personal feeling. If that is the case, what might an ‘ecopoetic lyric’ look like? Tom Bristow (15) writing on the ecopoetic lyric, or as he terms the ‘Anthropocene lyric’, believes that ecopoetry should distance itself from anthropomorphic descriptions of nature and integrate conceptions of humanity’s impacts on the planet.' (Sophie Finlay : Introduction to Embodied Belonging: Towards an Ecopoetic Lyric
Only literary material by Australian authors individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:
Rewilding and Body Reclamation by Stefanie Kirby
Edwardsia Ivelli by Veronica Fibisan
Before I Have Time to Grieve and Pluviophile, Meet the Observer by King Llanza
Needlefish by Lorelei Bacht
Sea Ice Breakup, From Erebus' Summit by Tehnuka