Amy Crutchfield Amy Crutchfield i(8428387 works by)
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

BiographyHistory

Amy Crutchfield is a poet. Her work has been published in journals including the Australian Poetry Journal, Island, Westerly, The Poetry Review, The Moth, PN Review, and Poetry Ireland Review.  She won the Gwen Harwood Prize in 2020/21.

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon The Cyprian Artarmon : Giramondo Publishing , 2023 26363908 2023 selected work poetry

'Powerful debut which interrogates the nature of love in its various forms

'From poems of desire and sexual longing to poems of love in the face of death, The Cyprian explores the joy and heartbreak love weaves into our lives. The collection confronts some of our primary questions about love: how is it possible to accept the death of the beloved? What role does deception play in love? When does love become a force of exploitation? The collection is composed of five parts, reflecting the different aspects of Aphrodite, the goddess of love and beauty — a complexity which is also implicit in the ambiguity of the book’s title, ‘the Cyprian’.

'Crutchfield trained as a classicist, and her poetry combines conversational idioms with mythic visions of human relationship, ‘longing and its/ fierce metamorphosis’. Elegies, love poems and imagistic snapshots mix with wide open epistolary verse. Her poetry reclaims the linguistic power and range of allusion found in late romantic poets like Christopher Brennan and Francis Webb, bringing them to bear on contemporary female experience.' (Publication summary)

2024 winner Prime Minister's Literary Awards Poetry
The Memory of Water i "Autonomy's paupers, golden of limb", 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Island , no. 161 2021; (p. 4-5) Island Online - 2022 2022;
2020-2021 winner Gwen Harwood Memorial Poetry Prize
Egg i "What shall the mother of the dead be called", 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Anthology 2016; (p. 13)
2016 inaugural winner Ros Spencer Poetry Prize
Last amended 6 Jun 2022 14:00:16
Other mentions of "" in AustLit:
    X