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Dan Disney Dan Disney i(A19477 works by)
Born: Established: 1970 East Gippsland, Gippsland, Victoria, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 From Human Positions Dan Disney , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Living Systems : Poetry from Asia Pacific 2024; (p. 104)
1 Inter-cultural Poetic Encounters : Camaraderie, Solidarity, Franchissement Amelia Walker , Dan Disney , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 21 no. 4 2024; (p. 515-524)

'This paper explores poetry as a means of augmenting cross-cultural connections; we maintain that the genre is inherently humanistic, and that connecting with poets abroad and at large can be generative, exploratory, and invested in locating traits amid our differences that ulitmately draw us closer toward renewed ethical engagements. In a world that seems increasingly distracted by noise (often produced willfully, it seems, to ideological intent), poetry remains yet a means of intervening, interfering with, and interrupting the myopias of narrowed accounts of self, and self in relation to others. We argue that poetry can continue to make uncommonly useful contributions towards a common humanity: as our numerous inter-cultural projects demonstrate, to think poetically and connectively is to work non-reductively, in resonant ways that can shift us beyond the quotidian, into the boundlessly possible.' (Publication abstract)  

1 Crechaid Dan Disney , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Dombóvár : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2024 2024;
1 War, Crisis, and Identity in Australian Poetry Dan Disney , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to Australian Poetry 2024; (p. 38-53)

' This chapter contextualises Australia’s involvement in major conflicts in light of the European invasion of Australia and the settler-colonial imaginary. It considers how poetry shaped the ANZAC myth extended settler masculinities and portrayed the soldier as both ordinary and extraordinary. The chapter considers divergent trajectories in World War II poetry, including the work of Kenneth Slessor, J. S. Manifold, James McAuley, and Douglas Stewart. It also considers responses to the Vietnam War, such as Bruce Dawe’s “Homecoming.” While the chapter investigates the dismantling of the soldier myth in late twentieth-century poetry, it also notes colonial presumptions persisting in works like Les Murray’s “Visiting Anzac in the Year of Metrification.” It then outlines the emergence of Indigenous counter-narratives to the violence of settler colonialism.'

Source: Abstract

1 A Critical Villanelle for John Kinsella Singing Walter Benjamin's 'The Author as Producer' (1934) Alongside Byung-Chul Habn's In the Swarm (2017) Dan Disney , 2024 single work prose
— Appears in: Westerly , August vol. 69 no. 1 2024; (p. 115-129)
1 … Sijo/stling?: Notes on Form as Interlinguistic, Transcultural Survival Strategy Dan Disney , 2024 single work prose
— Appears in: Meanjin , March vol. 83 no. 1 2024; (p. 158-167)

'My Korean friends have consistently reminded me that these are not sijo, an assertion with which I vehemently concur. Within these so-called sijo/stlings, any interaction with the canonical Korean form arises from engaged positions of deference, respect and awe. Simply put, no text in this book draws in the capacious, synergistic, arresting brilliance of the native Korean sijo. (Disney 77)'  (Publication abstract)

1 (Review) Alogopoiesis Dan Disney , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: World Literature Today , May vol. 98 no. 3 2024; (p. 78-79)

— Review of Alogopoiesis Amelia Walker , 2023 selected work poetry
1 Grave Sites Dan Disney , 2023 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland , Winter no. 251 2023; (p. 53-59)
'In his "Terra Australis" (1949), Douglas Stewart problematises the notion of an "Australia" when imagining a conversation between Spanish explorer Pedro Fernandes de Queiros (1563-1614) and William Lane (1861-1917), a utopian who founded the Australian Labour Movement before relocating to set up a "New Australia" (in Paraguay). When writing that " [t]he wind from Heaven blew both ways at once / And west went Captain Quiros [sic], east went Lane" (section 4, lines 23-4), Stewart asks us to consider by which means might we come to define a "country"? His poem asserts the awkward possibility that there is no Terra firma to the Terra nullius and, if looking to locate a place, Australia remains unlocatable. Country as epistemological state? Country as existential crisis.' 

(Introduction)

 
1 1 Periferal, Fantasmal i "Angus McMillan is lost (again), bushwhacked", Dan Disney , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January - February no. 450 2023; (p. 43)
1 Hive Notes i "and what is it inside our earphoned heads, in these handheld screens", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Teesta Review : A Journal of Poetry , November vol. 5 no. 2 2022;
1 [Untitled] i "in a <savage torpor/ vivid state of sensation/ dark and rundown bar>,", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Teesta Review : A Journal of Poetry , November vol. 5 no. 2 2022;
1 [Untitled] i "entering", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Teesta Review : A Journal of Poetry , November vol. 5 no. 2 2022;
1 [We Make] i "we make", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Teesta Review : A Journal of Poetry , November vol. 5 no. 2 2022;
1 >>> & || [extract] i "‘you umm-derstand?’", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Journal , vol. 12 no. 1 2022; (p. 128-129)
1 Adam Aitken : Revenant Dan Disney , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: World Literature Today , vol. 96 no. 4 2022; (p. 71)

— Review of Revenants Adam Aitken , 2022 selected work poetry
1 Jordie Albiston Fifteeners Dan Disney , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: World Literature Today , vol. 96 no. 3 2022; (p. 63-64)

— Review of Fifteeners Jordie Albiston , 2021 selected work poetry
'FIFTEENERS IS THE latest stunning installment in this storied poet’s fearless oeuvre, and Jordie Albiston’s book of strangest deformations of the sonnet form traverses “all the life / That an awkward person must go through in / The awkward course toward death.” In the first poem, an ars poetica and apologia, Albiston mimics an Elizabethan diction to reassert the privilege of affect over intellect: “Poetry may / be loved but never thought by love it may / be gotten holden but by thought nay so,” and that love is a paramountcy remains amply evidenced across this poet’s extensive catalog. Her books on love (Element; Euclid’s Dog: 100 Algorythmic Poems; The Book of Ethel) and its multiple modes of atrophy (Warlines; Jack & Mollie [& Her]; Vertigo: A Cantata) suggest that affective modalities—or is it the quest from disequilibrium toward idealized states—have long determined the impetus of this prolific and widely admired writer. (Introduction)
1 Naming (Next Thoughts on What Poets Do) Dan Disney , 2022 single work prose
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 19 no. 1 2022; (p. 54-67)

'We are on Ulleungdo, famed for its wild mountains that jut from the Eastern Sea more than one hundred kilometres from the Korean east coast, shockingly, like a stone fist smashing wetly into the echelons. This is the closest sovereign territory to the contested landmass, 독도 (Dokdo), some ninety kilometres further east and otherwise known as ‘the Liancourt Rocks’ (this moniker derived from a French whaling ship, Le Liancourt, which foundered on the islands in 1849), or ‘Takeshima’ (Japan). I am here with more than a dozen Korean artists – painters, composers, art directors, musicians – awaiting tomorrow’s ferry to 독도. This year’s group assembles, as groups of creative producers have done so annually under the auspices of the para-political lobby group, La Mer et l’Île, to make pilgrimage to 독도 and refocus a global conversation: our brief is to simply sit on the islands, reflectively, and allow art to materialise. Perhaps this is partly how soft power can operate, non-dogmatically, through casting into representational modes (language, etc.) in order to explore for something beyond the merely descriptive but perhaps, even, essential: a newer way of seeing, arising through coming to terms with newer ways of saying and stating. The historical documents do not need to be reframed, and have long referred to these islands. One of the earliest, the 세종실록 (or ‘Chronicle of King Sejong’ [1432]), mentions a sole rocky outcrop being visible from the top of Ulleungdo’s mountains ‘only during fine weather’. Despite the existence of this and a great many other documents that form the canon of Korean sovereignty, neighbouring states continue to contest and claim 독도 as their own, for their own politically complex reasons. How to act as a poet, then, and make a non-propagandistic suite that will speak clearly and without bias.' (Introduction)

1 Coronation i "& we’re veering through industrial mist", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 19 no. 1 2022; (p. 50-53)
1 Gippslanding (triptych) i "lumpen-proling an outer", Dan Disney , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January–February no. 439 2022; (p. 29)
1 Gwanghwamun Protests i "& || pointing screens through a scree", Dan Disney , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , June 2021;
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