A. Frances Johnson A. Frances Johnson i(A91173 works by) (a.k.a. Amanda Johnson)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Controlled Burn A. Frances Johnson , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Dombóvár : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2024 2024;
1 And the Ship Sails On : Jock Serong’s Elegant New Novel A. Frances Johnson , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 468 2024; (p. 26)

— Review of Cherrywood Jock Serong , 2024 single work novel

'Intertextual spins on Peter Carey’s 1988 novel Oscar and Lucinda may yet be finding new reading congregations. Carey’s progenitive postcolonial novel refuted landscapes empty of First Nations peoples, less jewel horizon than abject mire and macadam, along which the failed preacher Oscar and his party moved the components of a glass church overland and upriver to Edenic rural Bellingen. A metaphor of failed settler hopes and dreams, the fabulist glass church leitmotif is symbolic of white intrusion, as an omniscient Aboriginal narrator observes in the chapter savagely and simply entitled ‘Glass Cuts’.'  (Introduction)

1 Time Out of Mind : The Art of the Past in the Present A. Frances Johnson , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , July no. 466 2024; (p. 32-33)

— Review of The Engraver's Secret Lisa Medved , 2024 single work novel ; Chloé Katrina Kell , 2024 single work novel ; The Beauties Lauren Chater , 2024 single work novel
1 Caravaggio in Rome A. Frances Johnson , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Best of Australian Poems 2023 2023; (p. 28)
1 y separately published work icon Twenty Years of the Porter Poetry Prize Judith Beveridge , A. Frances Johnson , Damen O'Brien , Sara Saleh , Alex Skovron , Judith Bishop , 2023 26766341 2023 single work podcast

'This week on the ABR Podcast we celebrate twenty years of the Peter Porter Poetry Prize with readings from six winners. We invited these poets to reflect on the prize and their winning poems. Hear fresh readings from Judith Beveridge, A. Frances Johnson, Damen O’Brien, Sara M. Saleh, Alex Skovron and Judith Bishop. The 2024 Porter Prize, worth a total of $10,000, closes on October 9.' (Introduction)

1 Painted Weather i "Your meteorology app fails and you turn", A. Frances Johnson , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 454 2023; (p. 51)
1 I Want/Don't Want a Place A. Frances Johnson , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Best of Australian Poems 2022 2022; (p. 75)
1 Zoom i "The camera veers", A. Frances Johnson , Anthony Lynch , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 79 no. 3 2022; (p. 133-134)
1 3 y separately published work icon Save As A. Frances Johnson , Glebe : Puncher and Wattmann , 2021 23214753 2021 selected work poetry

'In A. Frances Johnson’s Save As, poetries of disfigurement braid tropes of ruin: land and country, self and community.

'Shunning earnestness and sanctimony, this distinctive ‘writing after nature’ offers deprecatory wit and an arsenal of intertextual and parodic free-verse techniques. An aluminium can narrates its own lifecycle, speaking of unchecked corporate extraction of aquifers; the Wikipedia entry for ‘Water’ is reframed in past tense, the vital chemical as pure remembrance in a dry world. Donne’s iconic ‘The Sunne Rising’ is retold with a factor 50 smile and more than a gentle nod to an overheated world. Keats’s lakeside withered sedge in ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’ is transplanted to a tired pink lake under Melbourne’s Westgate Bridge. Among these politically playful poems, moving personal elegies are interspersed. These, too, are subtly implicated in ecological crisis; the mourning subject is always part of a bigger picture.

'These poems eschew one-note, passivity-inducing, melancholic lamentation, and invite self-identification and self-critique. Boldly wrestling with the long-armed tradition of modern pastoral romanticism, the collection’s poetic and personal ‘dross scapes’ show urgent engagement with ecological ruin and ecologies of grief.

'Johnson’s compelling poetic agitprop attests that one cannot die of landscape, but one can die of despair over loss of country and home. In demolishing ‘landscape’ and ‘poetries of the natural world’, these poems invite us to confront the real while acknowledging mythic artifice.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 Coal and Meter i "The poet digs down a decade", A. Frances Johnson , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Griffith Review , April no. 72 2021; (p. 255)
1 Jobs for Women : Annunciate i "She won't go easily, two great wings", A. Frances Johnson , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Island , no. 161 2021; (p. 12-13) Island Online - 2022 2022;
1 Gramsci’s Pig i "One day in the prison orison yard, you saw a pig arrested", A. Frances Johnson , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Journal , vol. 10 no. 1 2020; (p. 56-57)
1 Thirty Pieces i "You hang, peerless, around the edges", A. Frances Johnson , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Island , no. 159 2020; (p. 40-41)
1 The Poem After Forests i "Take the Wikipedia entries for 'forest' and 'water'", A. Frances Johnson , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Rabbit , no. 29 2020; (p. 95-96)
1 1 My Father’s Thesaurus i "You drove faultlessly until sundown.", A. Frances Johnson , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January / February no. 418 2020; (p. 53)
1 The Art : Ultramarine i "There's always art, they tell you. You look blank. It's an art.", A. Frances Johnson , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Empathy : Poems from the 2018 ACU Prize for Poetry 2018; (p. 32-33)
1 You See : Romantic i "You see, Keats found breath at line's end", A. Frances Johnson , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Empathy : Poems from the 2018 ACU Prize for Poetry 2018; (p. 30-31)
1 Ring in i "I collect your wedding rings in a rainy satellite town of failing industry", A. Frances Johnson , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Anthology 2018; (p. 67)
1 What Rubbish A. Frances Johnson , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Axon : Creative Explorations , May vol. 8 no. 1 2018;

'As Australian poet John Kinsella has observed, ‘There is plenty of room for misunderstanding forms’. Alongside Kinsella, and sounding deceptively like a modern poetry critic rather than a vital materialist philosopher, Jane Bennett considers forms of nature, ethics and human affect to propose that we ‘turn the figures of “life” and “matter” around and around, worrying them until they start to seem strange, in something like the way a common word when repeated can become foreign nonsense sound’.'  (Introduction)

1 2 y separately published work icon Rendition for Harp and Kalashnikov A. Frances Johnson , Glebe : Puncher and Wattmann , 2017 14566212 2017 selected work poetry

'This new collection extends themes taken up in The Wind-up Birdman of Moorabool Street (2012). Environmental degradation and theme park notions of the natural endure. Accordingly, these poems reflect with tenderness, anger and irony on the ways humans chronicle, construct and war upon their natural environments. ‘Rendition’ puns on the idea of a song lyric, translation, surrender and also torture. In the anti-pastoral, anti-war poems offered here, groups of human beings and individuals are also shown as either tragically marginalized, lost or held too close. Cautionary ecocritical threnodies splice with personal elegies and historical cultural reflections to suggest a world awash with maladies of different kinds, as if to say that human beings must recalibrate love, death, survival and history as matters of urgency.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

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