AustLit logo
Look at Me, Ma--I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer! single work   criticism   biography  
Issue Details: First known date: 1996... 1996 Look at Me, Ma--I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer!
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Notes:
Paper delivered at the 1995 conference of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature (ASAL) at Adelaide University on 6 July 1995

Works about this Work

‘Words about Words Make Sure Self’ : Ania Walwicz and a Politics of Prose Poetry Alyson Miller , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 46 2017;

'This paper examines how Ania Walwicz uses the protean nature of the prose poem as a medium through which to subvert traditional notions of identity, especially in terms of anxieties about gender and sexuality. According to Dominique Hecq (2009), the prose poem is able to negotiate ‘between notions of a public language of prose and a marginal language of poetry, thereby … enacting particularly complex modes of engagement between subjectivity and the world’. This paper argues that it is the slippery and transformative nature of the prose poem that lends itself so neatly to a politics of subversion. As a ‘borderline genre’ (Hecq 2009), the prose poem occupies an ambiguous space – it is self-conscious and critical yet immersive and seductive; a medium that offers a deceptive simplicity, or a shocking confrontation with otherness. Oftentimes, the prose poem is capable of both in the same instance. By exploring the prose poetry of Walwicz, this paper contends that rather than being understood as a ‘disturbing and elusive’ literary oddity (Delville 1998), the prose poem can be seen to contest formal traditions of both narrative and identity.'  (Publication abstract)

Multiple Homes and Unhomely Belonging Anne Holden Rønning , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Le Simplegadi , no. 16 2016; (p. 50-60)

In a society where migration plays a significant role our identities become ambivalent to ourselves and only partly legible to others. This article will reflect on the role of the written word, political, social, and literary, as a narrative of multiple homes. Among the issues which determine the discourses and narratives of ‘multiple homes’ and ‘unhomely belonging’ are language and language politics (situational or real), beliefs about identities as solid and identifiable, constant border-crossings as central to many people’s lives, and the collision of social and cultural codes in the meanings and practices assigned to ‘the foreigner’.

Full Text PDF

Multiple Homes and Unhomely Belonging Anne Holden Rønning , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Le Simplegadi , no. 16 2016; (p. 50-60)

In a society where migration plays a significant role our identities become ambivalent to ourselves and only partly legible to others. This article will reflect on the role of the written word, political, social, and literary, as a narrative of multiple homes. Among the issues which determine the discourses and narratives of ‘multiple homes’ and ‘unhomely belonging’ are language and language politics (situational or real), beliefs about identities as solid and identifiable, constant border-crossings as central to many people’s lives, and the collision of social and cultural codes in the meanings and practices assigned to ‘the foreigner’.

Full Text PDF

‘Words about Words Make Sure Self’ : Ania Walwicz and a Politics of Prose Poetry Alyson Miller , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 46 2017;

'This paper examines how Ania Walwicz uses the protean nature of the prose poem as a medium through which to subvert traditional notions of identity, especially in terms of anxieties about gender and sexuality. According to Dominique Hecq (2009), the prose poem is able to negotiate ‘between notions of a public language of prose and a marginal language of poetry, thereby … enacting particularly complex modes of engagement between subjectivity and the world’. This paper argues that it is the slippery and transformative nature of the prose poem that lends itself so neatly to a politics of subversion. As a ‘borderline genre’ (Hecq 2009), the prose poem occupies an ambiguous space – it is self-conscious and critical yet immersive and seductive; a medium that offers a deceptive simplicity, or a shocking confrontation with otherness. Oftentimes, the prose poem is capable of both in the same instance. By exploring the prose poetry of Walwicz, this paper contends that rather than being understood as a ‘disturbing and elusive’ literary oddity (Delville 1998), the prose poem can be seen to contest formal traditions of both narrative and identity.'  (Publication abstract)

162-164 Look at Me, Ma--I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer!small AustLit logo
273-277 Look at Me, Ma--I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer!small AustLit logo
58-61 Look at Me, Ma--I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer!small AustLit logo Southerly
Informit * Subscription service. Check your library.
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X