Prithvi Varatharajan Prithvi Varatharajan i(A130865 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Literary Migrations Prithvi Varatharajan , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , May 2023;

— Review of Son of Sin Omar Sakr , 2022 single work novel

'Towards the end of Son of Sin, the narrator – a now adult Jamal Khaddaj Smith – relates a memory of ‘telling some story of his life’ to friends ‘like Adam or [his housemate] Dan’. His friends respond to his story ‘with mingled disbelief and wonderment, saying, Your life is like a soap opera – because there were too many characters, too much death, nothing at all like the kind of spare, elegant novels they studied in school’. ' (Introduction)

1 Lagoon i "The lagoon is a lake by a shore, made for frolicking.", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Kalliope X , Autumn no. 4 2023;
1 An Alluring Enigma : Prithvi Varatharajan Launches ‘And to Ecstasy by Marjon Mossammaparast Prithvi Varatharajan , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , vol. 36 no. 1 2023;

— Review of And to Ecstasy Marjon Mossammaparast , 2022 selected work poetry

'I’m Prithvi Varatharajan. I’m honoured to be launching Marjon Mossammaparast’s second poetry collection, And to Ecstasy. Like Marjon, I’m really pleased that her publisher Terri-ann White is here in Melbourne from Perth. And thanks to you all for coming here this Sunday afternoon, to celebrate this fine collection.'  (Introduction)

1 Squares and Rectangles : Shapely Poetry in Three New Volumes Prithvi Varatharajan , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 451 2023; (p. 45-46)

— Review of Ragged Disclosures Paul Hetherington , 2022 selected work poetry ; Dancing with Stephen Hawking John Foulcher , 2021 selected work poetry ; Carapace Misbah Wolf , 2022 selected work poetry
1 The World Deanimated : Inter-species Attention in an Age of Extinction Prithvi Varatharajan , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 449 2022; (p. 58-59)

— Review of Kin : Thinking with Deborah Bird Rose 2022 anthology criticism

'Deborah Bird Rose (1946–2018) was an interdisciplinary thinker who helped establish the field of the environmental humanities (or ecological humanities); in 2012 she also co-founded the scholarly journal Environmental Humanities. Having initially trained in anthropology, Rose strove to push that field and other ethnographic studies beyond their stubborn anthropocentrism. She came to Australia in 1980 from Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, to undertake PhD research in Aboriginal Australia. Her thinking was shaped by the decades she spent with Aboriginal mentors and friends, in the Northern Territory communities of Lingara and Yarralin. Across her writing, in books such as Wild Dog Dreaming: Love and extinction (2011) and Nourishing Terrains: Australian Aboriginal views of landscape and wilderness (1996), Rose demonstrated and promoted attentiveness to, and ethical engagement with, the plethora of beings on Earth.' (Introduction) 

1 Translating the World Prithvi Varatharajan , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin , September / Spring vol. 80 no. 3 2021; (p. 61-71)
'In the summer of 2019–20 I worked in the customer service department of an Australian zoo. I was used to cycling to work, gliding past traffic and cutting through parklands in my khaki uniform. But I found myself driving much more than usual. Cycling resulted in weariness and respiratory irritation, as I breathed in toxic particulate matter. Bushfire smoke smothered the city, forcing us indoors. With the smoke settling for days at a time, I relied more on my exhaust-spewing vehicle to get to work. The dark irony was hard to miss.' (Introduction)
1 Lyric Provocations : Two Politically Charged Poetry Volumes Prithvi Varatharajan , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 437 2021; (p. 60-61)

— Review of Dropbear Evelyn Araluen , 2021 selected work poetry essay ; Take Care Eunice Andrada , 2021 selected work poetry
1 Syntactical Torque Prithvi Varatharajan , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , October 2021;

— Review of Change Machine Jaya Savige , 2020 selected work poetry
'Approaching Jaya Savige’s third full-length poetry collection—a substantial and unusual work, one that appears nine years after his last, Surface to Air—I found myself thinking about what poetry is. Not all poetry reminds you of this question, and it is because Change Machine offers several models of poetry as a literary art that it occurred to me. Contemporary poetry collections typically employ a single model of poetry: for instance, as a method for formally resolving intense feeling/impression/thought using a first person voice, or as an artful exploration of language itself, often in the absence of narrative. Discussion around contemporary poetry can also suffer from under-definition. Readers and critics may label a piece of writing ‘lyrical’ or ‘poetic’ without arguing why, thereby implying that anything can be lyric or poetry. Over-definition may also occur, particularly by the academically-trained, who may insist on rigid demarcations between poetries with longer lineages and ‘non-poetries’ of experimentation (‘for experimentation’s sake’) and off-the-page performance. Western literary criticism has accrued taxonomically complex definitions of poetry over millennia. But as I read Change Machine, I thought loosely of the free-verse poem as a formally inventive puzzle, often in a first person voice, that subtly or radically conceals its ‘content’.' (Introduction)
1 Circling i "The day that mynahs flapped without purpose, returning between adjacent trees, to no end", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Journal , vol. 11 no. 1 2021; (p. 17)
1 Archives of Loss : Prithvi Varatharajan on Living with the Anthropocene Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , November 2020;

— Review of Living with the Anthropocene 2020 anthology essay prose
1 Wrong Is Wrong : Prithvi Varatharajan on John Kinsella Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , August 2020;

— Review of Displaced : A Rural Life John Kinsella , 2020 single work autobiography
1 Floods in Chennai i "A phone call from Adelaide as I’m buying cherries and peaches after a swim. ‘Do", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: PAN , no. 15 2020; (p. 55)
1 Bushfires and Driza-bones Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: PAN , no. 15 2020; (p. 54)
1 Bird Death i "An upturned bird on the cobblestones in the alleyway behind my office today, a", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: PAN , no. 15 2020; (p. 53)
1 'A Clatter of Leaves; Rain like Shiny Nails' i "A prose poem by Vicki Viidikas from India Ink, which I requested from the", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry 2020; (p. 167)
1 Ramanujan's Bridge : Revlections on Identity, Lived and Imagined Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Peril : An Asian-Australian Journal , no. 42 2020;
1 Inner-City Reflection i "The light at the pool’s bottom reminds me of broken", Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 13 June 2020; (p. 22) In Your Hands 2020; (p. 119)
1 The Ash of Song After the Flame Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , June 2020;

— Review of Fish Song Caitlin Maling , 2019 selected work poetry
1 In Situ Poetics Prithvi Varatharajan , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , April 2020;
1 2 y separately published work icon Entries Prithvi Varatharajan , Melbourne : Cordite Press , 2020 18546137 2020 selected work poetry

'The writing that follows arose from states of joy, anguish, ambivalence and contemplation. The poems come from a period of ten years, while other poetic, essayistic and diaristic pieces were produced with intensity over a shorter duration.

'Not long ago we humans began to share typed and contained expressions – whimsical, crass, artful, profound, wounded – instantly and with a large audience, through an expanding web of fibre optics. The poems straddle the rise of networked and relatively indiscriminate platforms for communication: some were produced before their rise, and fed by silence, while others were produced after, and fed by the ghost crackle of digitised speech.

'The prose poems and prose all come from after, but from a period within the after when I’d left the main conduits. At the outset of my asceticism, I found I had a compulsion to communicate to a wide audience. I sought to satisfy this compulsion, which I’d never felt so strongly, and began sending letters to myself by email, with a changing group of people as BCC recipients. As I wrote I felt I was consciously or unconsciously blending an older, poetic address – Eliot’s ‘I’ talking to itself or to nobody in particular – with recent communicative impulses. This seemed to create new possibilities for what the poem could be, and what it could enter into, as a form of mediated performance.'

Source: Author's blurb (via Cordite).

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