image of person or book cover 1218468497575771138.jpg
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y separately published work icon Between Yes and No selected work   poetry  
Shi yu fei zhi jian
Alternative title: 是與非之間
Issue Details: First known date: 2014... 2014 Between Yes and No
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Notes

  • Parallel text in English and Chinese.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Language: English , Chinese
    • Macao,
      c
      China,
      c
      East Asia, South and East Asia, Asia,
      :
      Bulahdelah, Bulahdelah area, Hawks Nest - Great Lakes area, Port Stephens, Mid North Coast, New South Wales,: Flying Island Books ,
      2014 .
      image of person or book cover 1218468497575771138.jpg
      This image has been sourced from online.
      Extent: 86p.
      ISBN: 9789996542756
      Series: y separately published work icon Flying Islands Pocket Books of Poetry Australian Pocket Poets; Pocket Poets Series Flying Island Books (publisher), Macao Bulahdelah : Flying Island Books Cerberus Press , 2011- Z1922767 2011- series - publisher poetry

Works about this Work

Philip Salom : Feeding Time to the Contemporary Toby Davidson , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Feeding the Ghost : 1 : Criticism on Contemporary Australian Poetry 2018; (p. 59-84)

'One way to witness the futility of defining the contemporary is to read someone attempting it twenty years back. Geoff Page's A Readers Guide to Contemporary Australian Poetry (1995) opts, after some vacillations ("does it include last year, last decade or even the last three decades?") to locate it in the poets of the late 60s, "whether they were later considered conservative or radical"—Tranter, Forbes, Adamson, Murray, Lehmann, Gray (1-2). While Page finds it "hard to think of any woman born between 1940 and 1950 who has rivalled the impact of most of the male poets cited so far", Jan Owen (b. 1940), Jennifer Rankin (1941), Joanne Burns (1945), Jennifer Maiden (1949) all are given entries of roughly the same length (8). The critical and commercial success of the slightly younger Dorothy Porter (b.1954) proved a little too contemporary for Page, with The Monkey's Mask reduced to "the verse detective novel she is now working on", even if, four lines below, his own bibliography gives the title and its publication date of 1994—the year prior (228). While the "general loosening up" caused by the "Woodstock generation", paperbacks and live performance has proven fruitful, Page concedes that the majority of his sixty-four chosen poets are no longer writing, with only twenty-four remaining active, the rest "lost to journalism, academia, early death, arts administration, the novel and the counter-culture of northern New South Wales" (2-3)...' (Introduction)

Review Short: Philip Salom’s Between Yes and No Jal Nicholl , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , October no. 51.1 2015;

— Review of Between Yes and No Philip Salom , Iris Fan Xing (translator), Zijiang Song (translator), 2014 selected work poetry
Review Short: Philip Salom’s Between Yes and No Jal Nicholl , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , October no. 51.1 2015;

— Review of Between Yes and No Philip Salom , Iris Fan Xing (translator), Zijiang Song (translator), 2014 selected work poetry
Philip Salom : Feeding Time to the Contemporary Toby Davidson , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Feeding the Ghost : 1 : Criticism on Contemporary Australian Poetry 2018; (p. 59-84)

'One way to witness the futility of defining the contemporary is to read someone attempting it twenty years back. Geoff Page's A Readers Guide to Contemporary Australian Poetry (1995) opts, after some vacillations ("does it include last year, last decade or even the last three decades?") to locate it in the poets of the late 60s, "whether they were later considered conservative or radical"—Tranter, Forbes, Adamson, Murray, Lehmann, Gray (1-2). While Page finds it "hard to think of any woman born between 1940 and 1950 who has rivalled the impact of most of the male poets cited so far", Jan Owen (b. 1940), Jennifer Rankin (1941), Joanne Burns (1945), Jennifer Maiden (1949) all are given entries of roughly the same length (8). The critical and commercial success of the slightly younger Dorothy Porter (b.1954) proved a little too contemporary for Page, with The Monkey's Mask reduced to "the verse detective novel she is now working on", even if, four lines below, his own bibliography gives the title and its publication date of 1994—the year prior (228). While the "general loosening up" caused by the "Woodstock generation", paperbacks and live performance has proven fruitful, Page concedes that the majority of his sixty-four chosen poets are no longer writing, with only twenty-four remaining active, the rest "lost to journalism, academia, early death, arts administration, the novel and the counter-culture of northern New South Wales" (2-3)...' (Introduction)

Last amended 5 Oct 2018 12:54:29
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