y separately published work icon Frankenstein's Bathtub selected work   poetry  
Issue Details: First known date: 2001... 2001 Frankenstein's Bathtub
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Carindale, Camp Hill - Carina area, Brisbane - South East, Brisbane, Queensland,: Interactive Press , 2001 .
      Extent: 68p.
      ISBN: 1876819073
      Series: Emerging Authors Interactive Press (publisher), 2000- series - publisher The Emerging Authors Series showcases emerging Australian literary talent and is available in digital and print form.

Works about this Work

Writing the Body Orchid Tierney , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to Australian Poetry 2024; (p. 274-291)

'This chapter discusses how writing emerging out of Gay Liberation in the 1970s offered an alternative to the masculine heteronormativity that dominated the Australian literary tradition. Emphasised that the personal was political, it foregrounded private sensuality, an exploration of the everyday, and a critique of gay discrimination. The chapter traces the development of a diversifying community in the 1980s through writing collectives, anthologies, and journals. A broadening of the spectrum of LGBTQ+ poetry in the 1990s and 2000s was informed by queer understandings of sexuality. It saw lesbian writers test the limits of lyrical poetry and an era of mainstream popularity, as exemplified in Dorothy Porter’s The Monkey’s Mask. The chapter considers how LGBTQ+ poets of colour have critiqued ideas of national belonging and white subjecthood. It then discusses the exploration of embodiment, including the turn to autotheory by contemporary trans and genderqueer writers, resistance of ableist discourses, and the navigation of illness, such as AIDS, mental illness, and chronic pain.'

Source: Abstract.

Different Kinds of Burning : New Poetry Kerry Leves , 2001 single work review
— Appears in: Overland , Summer no. 165 2001; (p. 124-127)

— Review of Behind the Moon Jacob G. Rosenberg , 2000 selected work poetry ; A Fortunate Star Marjorie Pizer , 2001 selected work poetry ; Invisible Tattoos Lauren Williams , 2000 selected work poetry ; Semi Madness : Voices from Semaphore Geoff Goodfellow , 1997 selected work poetry ; Frankenstein's Bathtub Tricia Dearborn , 2001 selected work poetry ; Sealer's Cove D. J. Huppatz , 2000 single work poetry ; Hey, I've Got the Racist Flu! : A Faint Voice From Vietnamese School Children Dương Xuân , 2002 selected work poetry
Different Kinds of Burning : New Poetry Kerry Leves , 2001 single work review
— Appears in: Overland , Summer no. 165 2001; (p. 124-127)

— Review of Behind the Moon Jacob G. Rosenberg , 2000 selected work poetry ; A Fortunate Star Marjorie Pizer , 2001 selected work poetry ; Invisible Tattoos Lauren Williams , 2000 selected work poetry ; Semi Madness : Voices from Semaphore Geoff Goodfellow , 1997 selected work poetry ; Frankenstein's Bathtub Tricia Dearborn , 2001 selected work poetry ; Sealer's Cove D. J. Huppatz , 2000 single work poetry ; Hey, I've Got the Racist Flu! : A Faint Voice From Vietnamese School Children Dương Xuân , 2002 selected work poetry
Writing the Body Orchid Tierney , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to Australian Poetry 2024; (p. 274-291)

'This chapter discusses how writing emerging out of Gay Liberation in the 1970s offered an alternative to the masculine heteronormativity that dominated the Australian literary tradition. Emphasised that the personal was political, it foregrounded private sensuality, an exploration of the everyday, and a critique of gay discrimination. The chapter traces the development of a diversifying community in the 1980s through writing collectives, anthologies, and journals. A broadening of the spectrum of LGBTQ+ poetry in the 1990s and 2000s was informed by queer understandings of sexuality. It saw lesbian writers test the limits of lyrical poetry and an era of mainstream popularity, as exemplified in Dorothy Porter’s The Monkey’s Mask. The chapter considers how LGBTQ+ poets of colour have critiqued ideas of national belonging and white subjecthood. It then discusses the exploration of embodiment, including the turn to autotheory by contemporary trans and genderqueer writers, resistance of ableist discourses, and the navigation of illness, such as AIDS, mental illness, and chronic pain.'

Source: Abstract.

Last amended 21 Jun 2023 15:08:16
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