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Susie Greenhill Susie Greenhill i(A120746 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 It Will Not Be Enough Susie Greenhill , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: The Sky Falls Down : An Anthology of Loss 2019; (p. 16-18)
1 River Water Susie Greenhill , 2017 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , no. 151 2017; (p. 66-83)
1 Brittle Fish Susie Greenhill , 2016 single work short story
— Appears in: Zoomorphic , May no. 5 2016;
The hatching of chicks from the perspective of their mother.
1 Richell Prize 2016 Winner: Read Susie Greenhill's Opening Chapter of The Clinking Susie Greenhill , 2016 extract novel
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 29 September 2016;
'The Clinking explores extinction, grief and interconnection against the backdrop of a warming climate, through the eyes of a scientist watching ‘the world he loves and knows intimately disappearing’'
1 The Secrets of Trees Susie Greenhill , 2015 single work short story
— Appears in: Communion Literary Magazine , June no. 3 2015;
1 Unravelling Susie Greenhill , 2015 single work short story
— Appears in: Transportation : Islands and Cities - A Collection of Short Stories from Tasmania and London 2015;
1 y separately published work icon Maps for the Lost : A Collection of Short Fiction and Human / Nature Ecotones : Climate Change and the Ecological Imagination : A Critical Essay Susie Greenhill , Perth : Edith Cowan University , 2015 15339401 2015 single work thesis essay

'The thesis comprises a collection of short fiction, Maps for the Lost, and a critical essay, “Human / Nature Ecotones: Climate Change and the Ecological Imagination.” In ecological terms, areas of interaction between adjacent ecosystems are known as ecotones. Sites of relationship between biotic communities, they are charged with fertility and evolutionary possibility. While postcolonial scholarship is concerned with borders as points of cross-cultural contact, ecocritical thought focuses upon the ecotone that occurs at the interface between human and non-human nature.

'In their occupation of the liminal zones between human and natural realms, the characters and narratives of Maps for the Lost reveal and nurture the porosity of conventional demarcations. In the title story, a Czech artist maps the globe by night in order to find his lover. The buried geographies of human landscapes coalesce with those of the non-human realm: the territories of wolves and the scent-trails of a fox mingle imperceptibly with nocturnal Prague and the ransacked villages of post-war Croatia. In “Seeds,” a narrative structured around the process of biological growth, the lost memories of an elderly woman are returned to her by her garden. “The Skin of the Ocean” traces the obsession of a diver who sinks his yacht under the weight of coral and fish, while in “Drift,” an Iranian refugee writes letters along the tide-line of a Tasmanian beach.

'The essay identifies the inadequacy of literature and literary scholarship’s response to the threat of climate change as a failure of the imagination, reflecting the transgressive dimension of the crisis itself, and the dualistic legacy which still informs Western discourse on non-human nature. In order to redress this shortfall, which I argue the current generations of writers have an urgent moral responsibility to do, it is critical that we learn to understand the natural world of which we are a part, in ways that cast off the limitations of conventional representation. Paradoxically, it is the profoundly disruptive (apocalyptic?) nature of the climate crisis itself, which may create the imaginative traction for that shift in comprehension, forcing us, through loss, to interpret the world in ways that have been forgotten, or are fundamentally new. By analysing Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, and Les Murray’s “Presence” sequence, the essay explores the correlation between imaginative and ecological processes, and the role of voice, embodiment, patterning and story in negotiations of nature and place. In the context of the asymptotical essence of the relation between text and world, and the paradox of phenomenological representation, it calls for a deeper cultural engagement with scientific discourse and indigenous philosophy, in order to illuminate the multiplicity and complexity of human connections to the non-human natural world' (Thesis summary)

1 Stillness, Smallness Susie Greenhill , 2013 single work short story
— Appears in: Forty South Short Story Anthology 2013 : The Ten Best Entries from the 2012 Competition 2013;
1 This Butterfly Susie Greenhill , 2013 single work short story
— Appears in: Review of Australian Fiction , vol. 7 no. 2 2013;
1 Cloud Polishing Susie Greenhill , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: Islet
1 The Skin of the Ocean Susie Greenhill , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , Autumn no. 128 2012; (p. 29-41)
1 The Catch Susie Greenhill , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: 40 ̊ South Short Story Anthology 2012 : The Ten Best Entries from the 2011 Competition 2012;
1 Forest Susie Greenhill , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: Women's Work : Short Stories, New Writers 2012;

The potency of the Tasmanian wilderness and the aching loneliness of the protestor is the essence of Greenhill’s ‘Forest’, where one man will sacrifice everything to unite with nature.

Source: 'The Launch of Our First Ebook' Overland website http://overland.org.au/2012/03/the-launch-of-our-first-ebook-womens-work/ 01/03/2012 (Sighted 11/06/2013)

1 Maps for the Lost Susie Greenhill , 2009 single work short story
— Appears in: Etchings , no. 6 2009; (p. 25-38)
1 Drift Susie Greenhill , 2008 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , Summer no. 115 2008; (p. 120-131)
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