Helena Kadmos Helena Kadmos i(A138085 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Leaning In Helena Kadmos , 2023 single work prose
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 68 no. 1 2023; (p. 38-46)
1 And a Moth Flew Out Helena Kadmos , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Island Online - 2022 2022;
1 Pockets Helena Kadmos , 2021 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , April vol. 25 no. 1 2021;
1 Crossing the Shadow Line : Collaborative Creative Writing about Grief Rachel Robertson , Helena Kadmos , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 17 no. 2 2020; (p. 214-225)

'This paper explores the process and outcome of a collaborative life writing project about the death of a parent. Aiming to discover whether collaborative creative nonfiction writing can broaden the representation of experiences of grief and address some of the ethical challenges of writing about vulnerable others, we draw on the scholarship on memoir writing and collaboration and analyse our own process and challenges against this literature. We also identify some of the benefits of collaboratively writing about a recent and personal grief.' (Publication abstract)

1 Held at Bay Helena Kadmos , 2020 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 58 2020;
1 Loops Helena Kadmos , 2020 single work short story
— Appears in: Meniscus , vol. 8 no. 1 2020; (p. 116-122)
1 Family Secret Helena Kadmos , 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January / February no. 408 2019; (p. 32)

'The discovery of human bones is an intriguing narrative opening that rarely disappoints and seems an adaptable vehicle for the Australian gothic and representations of the impacts of colonisation on people and country. Perhaps this is because the image of curved, white mineral shapes (and the hint of stories fossilised within) contrast equally vividly with sandy coastal plains, central red dust, bleak mountain scarps, and dense green forest.'   (Publication summary)

1 Re-Imagining Indigenous Australia through the Short Story : Heat and Light by Ellen van Neerven Helena Kadmos , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , November vol. 33 no. 3 2018;

'In 1998 Michelle Grossman’s overview of Indigenous women’s writing explored the significant contribution that life writing had made to the country’s literatures and pondered where younger authors might take Indigenous writing in the twenty-first century. This essay examines the work of one such writer, Ellen van Neerven, whose award-winning collection of stories, Heat and Light (2014), is a work of fiction that draws in part on personal and family stories to offer heterogeneous representations of individuals and families, lovers and friends. Part short story cycle, part long story, part story collection, the text resists easy categorisation. Within its tripartite structure, the sixteen stories are narrated in radically different ways to draw on themes explored before in Australian Aboriginal literature, such as the importance of extended family and belonging, in sometimes new ways, such as through a futuristic vision of Australia. Through a close reading of the text, and discussion that incorporates comments made by Neerven herself, this article suggests that through its varied structures, genres and styles, Heat and Light re-imagines and celebrates the fluid and diverse nature of contemporary Indigeneity.'

Source: Abstract.

1 A Darkness, A Shadow Helena Kadmos , Rachel Robertson , 2018 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Meanjin , Autumn vol. 77 no. 1 2018; (p. 188-193)
1 Photograph Helena Kadmos , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Meniscus , June vol. 5 no. 1 2017; (p. 99-104)
1 Public Relations Helena Kadmos , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 62 no. 1 2017; (p. 101-109)

'Stacy clenched buttered toast between her teeth, pulled her hair back into a ponytail and stooped to refresh her Facebook page. A string of random shares appeared from her sister Emma, back in Perth. The was also a post from her mum, a photo of a gorilla nursing a snow white kitten.The caption read : Keep you f#%*ing paws off! To encourage her, Stacy liked it.' (Introduction)

1 A Review of Susan Midalia’s ‘Feet to the Stars: and Other Stories’ Helena Kadmos , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: Editor's Desk - 2016 2016;

— Review of Feet to the Stars : And Other Stories Susan Midalia , 2015 selected work short story
1 An Encounter with Purple : A Review of Purple Prose Helena Kadmos , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: Editor's Desk - 2016 2016;

— Review of Purple Prose 2015 anthology prose
1 y separately published work icon Riding Waves: Representing Women's Relational Autonomy in the Short Story Cycle Helena Kadmos , 2015 8982629 2015 single work thesis

'The short story cycle is a collection of independent yet interrelated stories. This thesis is interested in the potential of the short story cycle form to tell stories about women’s ordinary lives and, within such stories, to explore the importance to women of continuing relationships of interdependence and care. This discussion is grounded in feminist critical discourses of relational autonomy. It rests on the claim that the short story cycle is a particularly productive form for writers interested in stories exploring the complexity of apparently mundane moments in women’s relational lives and imagining how particular relationships transform women over the longer course of their lives. The thesis is the product of a practice- and theory-based approach to research. The first part comprises an original work of fiction, which tells five, interconnected stories about individual women from three generations of one family in Australia, spanning the period between the 1980s and the 2010s. The stories focus on moments that linger, where action is limited, and where change is often nuanced or even imperceptible. The work consciously draws on structural and thematic elements of the short story cycle form uncovered through research into short story cycle theory and existing cycles written about women. The dissertation comprising the second part of the thesis reflects on the distinguishing features of the short story cycle, its diverse rendering in North America, and its critical treatment by key theorists, highlighting how this mode of storytelling helps make salient women’s relational lives. This thesis also aims to increase awareness of the form in Australian literary scholarship. Therefore, the dissertation offers a close reading of one contemporary Australian short story cycle, Purple Threads, by Jeanine Leane, in order to demonstrate the imaginative significance and effects produced in an Aboriginal inflection of the form.'

1 Given, Received, Withheld : Purple Threads by Jeanine Leane, the Short Story Cycle and the Fragmentary Nature of Knowing Helena Kadmos , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: Outskirts : Feminisms along the Edge , November no. 31 2014;
'Feminist theorists have written extensively about the nature of knowledge about, and formed by, women. Broadly, their contributions have focussed on ‘the critique of the individualism of modern epistemology, [and the] reconstructions of epistemic subjects as situated knowers’ (Grasswick, 2013, np). They have challenged traditional views of knowledge as fixed and unyielding by claiming that various facets of identity, such as gender, sexuality, ethnicity and class, impact on reading and research, shaping, for instance, the questions that are included and excluded from the reader’s lines of enquiry. These factors are therefore epistemologically significant in thinking about who can know, and what one can know. For instance, philosopher Lorraine Code asserts that the creative interplay between objective and subjective facets of knowledge construction mean that ‘knowing other people, precisely because of the fluctuations and contradictions of subjectivity, is an ongoing, communicative, interpretive process [that] can never be fixed or complete …’ (1991, 38). This claim seems particularly pertinent to the interactive processes by which individuals come to a greater sense of who they are in the context of the wider family. In this article, I draw from this body of work to examine how the short story cycle might, in a specific and concrete way, imaginatively represent these processes. I argue that characteristics of the short story cycle, such as the open-ended lapses between stories, and the focus on minor narrative arcs, make it a suitable form through which readers may piece together disjointed and sometimes inconsistent detail to achieve some sense of knowable truth about women whose lives contain aspects that remain unarticulated. I illustrate these arguments with the example of Purple Threads (2011), a collection of stories based on the personal experiences of Wiradjuri writer and scholar, Jeanine Leane. By focussing on discrete experiences in each individual story, Purple Threads builds a uniquely Australian picture of three generations of women and girls who experience simultaneous and multiple oppressions on the basis of their colour, sex and class, yet survive and in many ways thrive by drawing on a range of skills and resources. Specifically, I use examples from this cycle to show that knowledge passed within and between generations in families is not neutral, objective or finite, but accumulated through exchanges that are often uncertain, sporadic and inconsistent.' (Author's introduction)
1 ‘Look What They Done to This Ground, Girl!’ : Country and Identity in Jeanine Leane’s Purple Threads Helena Kadmos , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 14 no. 3 2014;

'Purple Threads, by Jeanine Leane, embodies country. Images of the land are physically and emotionally evoked in the individual stories that make up this short story cycle, running through the stories as delicately as strands of purple wisteria and as powerfully as the Murrumbidgee River flows and then surges through the countryside where they are set. In this article I aim to demonstrate how two features of the short story cycle - the independence and interrelatedness of the stories in the cycle, and the longer story within the cycle - help to convey the multifarious connections people can have to their country, family and the places they call home.

Leane draws on her own experiences to articulate formative incidents in a young girl’s life that explore what it meant to be an Aboriginal girl growing up in central NSW in the 1960s and ’70s. The development of Sunny’s cultural and ethnic identity is inseparable from her relationship with country, nurtured by her Nan and Aunties’ love and respect for the land, and challenged by a Dorothy-esque journey that carries her far away to a foreign country in search of family, and back again to the place she feels most loved and secure.

'This article thus explores the importance of country in Sunny’s growing awareness of her identity, and forms part of a broader project on the representations of women’s lives in the short story cycle.' (Publication abstract)

1 Little Adonis and the Fruit Box Helena Kadmos , 2012 single work prose
— Appears in: Eureka Street , 2 July vol. 22 no. 13 2012; (p. 15-19)
1 Aunties Delight as Sunny Finds Her Cultural Identity Helena Kadmos , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 18-19 February 2012; (p. 21)

— Review of Purple Threads Jeanine Leane , 2010 selected work short story
1 Biding Time Helena Kadmos , 2010 single work short story
— Appears in: KSP 25th Anniversary Anthology 2010 2010; (p. 59-66)
1 Moving On Helena Kadmos , 2010 single work short story
— Appears in: Westerly , November vol. 55 no. 2 2010; (p. 80-93)
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