Meaghan once remarked (I think to the poet and art critic Ken Bolton) that she didn’t like poetry because of all the empty space on the page. A quarter of a century ago in 1992, in Ecstasy and Economics: American Essays for John Forbes, she said she was ‘a desultory reader of poetry’ and that reading poetry might induce a ‘scary cultural estrangement’.1 In the foreword, she extrapolates the ‘awkward’ place of poetry in cultural studies then as being more an American problem than an Australian one but nearly a quarter of a century later I wonder if poetry has made an individuated local spot for itself, or even if it cares to. I mean, ‘should poetry worry?
Since the late 1990s, complaints about the status of poetry, and the parlous state of poetry publish...
When students at Manchester University erased a famous poem by Rudyard Kipling and substituted an al...
A discussion of popular poetry versus literary taste, with reference to the Ern Malley poems
Certainly, when people say to me, as they often have done, ‘I can’t remember anything afterward,’ I ...
What are we really wishing for when we want poetry to have the prominence it had in the past? Why do...
I am delighted to be here celebrating the unique career of Meaghan Morris, who is, after all, not ju...
In his essay on Australian poetry of the early twentieth century, Nicholas Birns claims that the poe...
My aural introduction was Peter Allen’s song, ‘Tenterfield Saddler’. And most of you will know that ...
A review of Meaghan Morris, Identity Anecdotes: Translation and Media Culture (Sage, London, 2006)
Rooted in reflective practice, this critical study uses a consideration of environment writing to op...
Poetry after Cultural Studies elucidates the potential of poetry scholarship when joined with cultur...
Visual and conceptual poetry became significant practices in Canada in the late 1950s and 1960s as p...
Meaghan Morris was celebrated at the Meaghan Morris Festival as a mentor, a cultural theorist, a muc...
Building on recent studies of the relationship between visual poetries and eco-poetics, this essay a...
Dana Gioia\u27s controversial book Can Poetry Matter? challenges poets to write in traditional forms...
Since the late 1990s, complaints about the status of poetry, and the parlous state of poetry publish...
When students at Manchester University erased a famous poem by Rudyard Kipling and substituted an al...
A discussion of popular poetry versus literary taste, with reference to the Ern Malley poems
Certainly, when people say to me, as they often have done, ‘I can’t remember anything afterward,’ I ...
What are we really wishing for when we want poetry to have the prominence it had in the past? Why do...
I am delighted to be here celebrating the unique career of Meaghan Morris, who is, after all, not ju...
In his essay on Australian poetry of the early twentieth century, Nicholas Birns claims that the poe...
My aural introduction was Peter Allen’s song, ‘Tenterfield Saddler’. And most of you will know that ...
A review of Meaghan Morris, Identity Anecdotes: Translation and Media Culture (Sage, London, 2006)
Rooted in reflective practice, this critical study uses a consideration of environment writing to op...
Poetry after Cultural Studies elucidates the potential of poetry scholarship when joined with cultur...
Visual and conceptual poetry became significant practices in Canada in the late 1950s and 1960s as p...
Meaghan Morris was celebrated at the Meaghan Morris Festival as a mentor, a cultural theorist, a muc...
Building on recent studies of the relationship between visual poetries and eco-poetics, this essay a...
Dana Gioia\u27s controversial book Can Poetry Matter? challenges poets to write in traditional forms...
Since the late 1990s, complaints about the status of poetry, and the parlous state of poetry publish...
When students at Manchester University erased a famous poem by Rudyard Kipling and substituted an al...
A discussion of popular poetry versus literary taste, with reference to the Ern Malley poems