Caitlin Doyle-Markwick Caitlin Doyle-Markwick i(9814511 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Madison Griffiths Tissue Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 5-11 August 2023;

— Review of Tissue Madison Griffiths , 2023 single work autobiography

'Are women obliged to mourn an abortion? Must we perform the role of La Llorona, condemned to weep for a lost child, even one we never wanted? Will it ever be possible to treat a termination as a simple medical procedure and feel uncomplicated relief? Even from the pro-choice camp there is sometimes a defensive argument that the choice is never easy. There is a tacit acceptance that the decision is necessarily a heavy one, even though the heaviness often comes not from the decision itself, but from the political weight society, particularly the anti-abortion minority, puts on the act of abortion and the bodies of those who have them.'(Introduction)   

1 Catherine Therese Things She Would Have Said Herself Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 8-14 April 2023;

— Review of Things She Would Have Said Herself Catherine Therese , 2023 single work novel

'Leslie Bird disapproves of the world. Specifically, she disapproves of gay people, trans people, Muslims, curly hair, exposed décolletages and basically everything that her husband, Wallace, and their children do. Sometimes she keeps her disapproval and bigotry to herself, but mostly she doesn’t.'(Introduction)

1 Sally Olds People Who Lunch Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 10-16 September 2022;

— Review of People Who Lunch : Essays on Work, Leisure and Loose Living Sally Olds , 2022 selected work essay

'Sally Olds’s essay collection, People who Lunch: Essays on work, leisure & loose living, deals primarily with worlds, or subcultures, on the margins of society. Each holds within it a kernel of hope for a different way of living: club culture with its embrace of hedonism and rejection of living-to-work; cryptocurrency’s promise of financial returns outside state-regulated markets and wage labour; polyamory’s attempts to break free of the stultifying nuclear family unit. None, however, has managed to pose any serious threat to the existing order and most have come to live comfortably within or alongside capitalism.' (Introduction)

1 Al Campbell : The Keepers Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 26 February - 4 March 2022;

— Review of The Keepers Al Campbell , 2022 single work novel

'“This is a tragic case” concludes an article in a scrapbook kept by Jay, a full-time carer to her two sons and the narrator of Al Campbell’s debut novel, The Keepers. It’s one of many stories about neglect, abuse and deaths of people with disabilities that Jay extracts from newspapers and reports – a loosely assembled archive of horror.' (Introduction)

1 Black Mould Mandy Ord , Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2021 single work short story
— Appears in: The Suburban Review , December no. 24 2021;
1 Max Easton : The Magpie Wing Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 30 October - 5 November 2021;

— Review of The Magpie Wing Max Easton , 2021 single work novel

'The Crossroads Hotel in Casula has gained the kind of infamy that most venues in 2021 want to avoid. In June the hotel became ground zero for the Covid-19 outbreak in the multiracial, largely working-class area of south-west Sydney. The starkly different, militarised response to this outbreak, compared with those in the eastern suburbs, has arguably done more to entrench Sydney’s west–east divide than any other event in the city’s history.' (Introduction)

1 On Not Becoming a Teacher Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , September 2021;
'Growing up, I always saw teaching as a stable, rewarding and valued career path. But in recent years the teachers I know have faced burnout, a lack of support and their conditions undermined. How did such a vital sector fall into crisis?' (Introduction)
1 Chloe Wilson, Hold Your Fire Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 1-7 May 2021;

— Review of Hold Your Fire Chloe Wilson , 2021 selected work short story

'“They said: ‘Keep that boy at arm’s length’. But whose arm? The arm of an orangutan, a giant squid, a Tyrannosaurus rex?” These lines from Chloe Wilson’s short story collection Hold Your Fire could be a response to the standard advice given to girls on how to ward off unwanted sexual advances. It’s the kind of advice that puts the onus on victims, so that the body they’re trying to protect – their own – somehow, monstrously, becomes both predator and prey, a hostile, turbulent force that they must spend their entire lives keeping under tight control.' (Introduction)

1 Figures in the Water i "What, Sir, would you have us do?", Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 February no. 95 2020;
1 Cunjevoi Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 24 2019;
1 Mother Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: StylusLit , March no. 5 2019;
1 JobReady Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2019 single work drama

'Matte is ready to re-enter the workforce. He's educated, certified and competent. Only, there don't seem to be many jobs…

'At JobReady Agency, it's our job to get you a job, no matter what! Job job job. But you'll have to work for it (because you can't expect to sit around all day on public money, can you?). We'll break you down and build you back up to be the perfect candidate. This may feel a little strange.

'JobReady is a surreal, dark comedy set in an employment agency. The play follows Matte Roland through the dark underbelly of the welfare system.'

Source: Old 505 Theatre.

1 The Eviction Caitlin Doyle-Markwick , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Antipodes , December vol. 31 no. 2 2017; (p. 377-382)
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