Cultural Precinct single work   poetry   "All this creating speaking breathing on Kaurna country demands more than"
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... 2016 Cultural Precinct
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Notes

  • Author's note: Reflecting on Tarnanthi, a Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Cordite Poetry Review The End no. 53.0 2016 9252936 2016 periodical issue 2016
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon The Best Australian Poems 2016 Sarah Holland-Batt (editor), Melbourne : Black Inc. , 2016 9665960 2016 anthology poetry

    'What and who makes good poetry? The Best Australian Poems anthology enters its sixteenth year with exciting young poet and critic Sarah Holland-Batt presenting her picks of this year’s standout work.' (Source: Publisher's website)

    Melbourne : Black Inc. , 2016
    pg. 85-86

Works about this Work

Recentring Water : Thinking with the Chain of Ponds Mandy Treagus , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , 25 May vol. 39 no. 1 2024;

'What might thinking with specific waters, and particular watery forms, bring to our understandings of how literature comes to mean? Taking cues from recent work in both the Blue Humanities – inspired by Pacific scholars – and the posthumanities, this article considers examples of recent writing in order to explore what is revealed when focus shifts to the aqueous. What ‘transversal alliances’ (Braidotti) and concomitant limitations are highlighted in writings and readings that take account of water? Thinking with a peculiarly Australian form of fluvial geomorphology – the chain of ponds – I consider four recent texts: John Kinsella’s 'Cellnight'; Natalie Harkin’s ‘Cultural Precinct’; Tony Birch’s The White Girl, and Christos Tsiolkas’s . Thinking with the chain of ponds reveals aspects of ‘hydrocolonialisms’ (Hofmeyr) and immersive ontologies. While all waters are revealed to be operating within the multiple restrictions of the nation state together with anthropogenic climate emergency, a focus on waters reveals possibilities of renewal as well as human and more-than-human connections. Taking this beyond the island continent to trans-Pacific links, I also consider the ways such connections are joyfully celebrated in Lisa Reihana’s indigifuturist video work Groundloop.'  (Publication abstract)

Recentring Water : Thinking with the Chain of Ponds Mandy Treagus , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , 25 May vol. 39 no. 1 2024;

'What might thinking with specific waters, and particular watery forms, bring to our understandings of how literature comes to mean? Taking cues from recent work in both the Blue Humanities – inspired by Pacific scholars – and the posthumanities, this article considers examples of recent writing in order to explore what is revealed when focus shifts to the aqueous. What ‘transversal alliances’ (Braidotti) and concomitant limitations are highlighted in writings and readings that take account of water? Thinking with a peculiarly Australian form of fluvial geomorphology – the chain of ponds – I consider four recent texts: John Kinsella’s 'Cellnight'; Natalie Harkin’s ‘Cultural Precinct’; Tony Birch’s The White Girl, and Christos Tsiolkas’s . Thinking with the chain of ponds reveals aspects of ‘hydrocolonialisms’ (Hofmeyr) and immersive ontologies. While all waters are revealed to be operating within the multiple restrictions of the nation state together with anthropogenic climate emergency, a focus on waters reveals possibilities of renewal as well as human and more-than-human connections. Taking this beyond the island continent to trans-Pacific links, I also consider the ways such connections are joyfully celebrated in Lisa Reihana’s indigifuturist video work Groundloop.'  (Publication abstract)

Last amended 22 Jun 2017 11:35:12
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