'As a largely unexplored group of organisms, fungi are ecologically complex members of the Australian
biota. Fungi represent non-human alterity and interstitiality—neither animal not plant, beautiful yet
evanescent, slimy and lethal, and eliding scientific categorisations. Donna Haraway's notion of
"companion species" and Anna Tsing's "arts of inclusion" remind us that sensory entanglements are
intrinsic to human-fungi relations. Drawing conceptually from Haraway and Tsing, this paper will examine
examples of poetry from John Shaw Neilson, Jan Owen, Douglas Stewart, Geoffrey Dutton, Caroline
Caddy, Michael Dransfield, Philip Hodgins, Jaime Grant and John Kinsella that represent sensory
involvements with fungi based in smell, sound, taste and touch. For Stewart, the crimson fungus is
archetypal of danger, ontologically ambivalent and warranting physical distance. For Caddy and
Dransfield, fungi are nutriment around which social and personal events transpire, whereas for Kinsella,
fungi express concisely—as part of an ecological milieu—nature's dynamic alterity.' (Author's abstract)