Julian Tompkin Julian Tompkin i(A129350 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 When the Dust Settles Julian Tompkin , 2024 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 20 April 2024; (p. 5)
1 Illuminating the Past and the Future Julian Tompkin , 2022 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 5 February 2022; (p. 6)
1 Island Odyssey Revisited Julian Tompkin , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 15 May 2021; (p. 4)
1 In Transit : Migration and Memory in the Writings of Martin Johnston and Dimitris Tsaloumas Julian Tompkin , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 19 no. 1 2019;

'In August 1964 Martin Johnston boarded the Ellinis in the port of Piraeus, destined for Sydney, Australia, bringing to an end his 14-year estrangement from the land of his birth. Johnston, who had lived abroad most of his life in England and Greece, would return as a literal migrant to his own country. It was a theme that would prove fecund and deeply allegorical for the then 17-year-old son of authors George Johnston and Charmian Clift, later manifesting in his poetic works such as In Transit: a sprawling 14-part paean to Johnston’s immutable sense of displacement.

'A little over a decade before, in 1952, Greek poet Dimitris Tsaloumas would complete the same metamorphic journey, fleeing his Dodecanese homeland and arriving in Melbourne, Australia where he would take up the uneasy mantle of Australia’s Hellenic poet in exile. Despite parabolic overtures of assimilation, paradoxical themes of longing and dislocation pockmark Tsaloumas’s vast canon, tethering an uneasy union between his two divergent worlds both ancient and contemporary; familiar and profoundly alien.

'This essay explores the lives and comparative themes of exile in the works of both Johnston and Tsaloumas—writers who both identified as Xenos, a Greek word that translates as both ‘guest’ and ‘stranger’—and investigates the often incorporeal, irredeemable and contradictory natures of nostalgia and belonging.' (Publication abstract)

1 Jack Lives Here Julian Tompkin , 2014 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 1-2 March 2014; (p. 14-15)
'Written while George Johnston was cloistered and near destitute on the Greek Island of Hydra, My Brother Jack would officially ordain him a literary superstar at home in Australia. Fifty years later, Julian Tompkin returns to the island that refuses to forget.'
1 Terra Australis Incognita Julian Tompkin , 2009 single work column
— Appears in: Vagabond Holes : David McComb and the Triffids 2009; (p. 113-114)
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