Issue Details: First known date: 2025... 2025 Strange Dreams and Unforgiving Landscapes : Australian Gothic and the Prose Poem
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'The Australian Gothic is rooted in loss, alienation and angst, concerned with boundaries, transgression and the horror of the “unseen, or the half-seen – the repressed matter that threatens to return” (Doolan, 2019). As a genre which turns on “the perceived hostility of the natural environment, the violence of colonisation … and fears of the racial Other” (Doolan, 2019), it is also embedded in complex ideas about the uncanny, the haunting of borderlines and margins; liminal spaces in which conceptions of belonging, dispossession, and the body interact in uneasy ways; and abjection. While there is significant scholarship on the Australian (colonial) Gothic in relation to cinema and fiction, its connection to poetry is relatively neglected. In this paper we consider the broader implications of prose poems by Samuel Wagan Watson, Thomas Shapcott, Ania Walwicz and Meredith Wattison, as well as prose poems of our own, focusing on how the Australian Gothic may be understood as a form of neo-Gothic, and how the Australian neo-Gothic prose poem possesses an uncanny ability to subvert traditional colonial notions. In doing so, we argue that the Australian neo-Gothic prose poem, partly due to its hybrid form, is well suited to recognising that tragic colonial histories are simultaneously past and present in a postcolonial world – a form of haunting in which violent encounters may not be safely relegated to the past or contained within static visions of time and place.' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

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    y separately published work icon TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs Writing from the Fringes no. 29 February 2025 29701818 2025 periodical issue 'This special issue of TEXT is primarily an outcome of the 2023 AAWP conference held at the University of Canberra. The theme of that conference, “We Need to Talk”, facilitated part of a wider conversation, locally and globally, about the role played by creative thinking and practice/s in navigating some of the wicked contemporary global problems with which we presently grapple. The challenges associated with navigating the contemporary world – especially those faced by marginalised and “fringe-oriented” communities – seem to be gaining in complexity and momentum. At the same time, ongoing debates and controversial questions prompt many of us to reflect on matters of personal identity, especially as they relate to communication, creative thinking, and the exploration of liminal places in art. Such issues (and why they matter) lie at the heart of Writing from the Fringes.' (Jen Webb, Kimberly K. Williams, Eileen Herbert-Goodall : Editorial introduction) 2025
Last amended 6 Mar 2025 10:24:25
https://textjournal.scholasticahq.com/article/129408-strange-dreams-and-unforgiving-landscapes-australian-gothic-and-the-prose-poem Strange Dreams and Unforgiving Landscapes : Australian Gothic and the Prose Poemsmall AustLit logo TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs
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