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Stephen Wright Stephen Wright i(6413700 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Incandescent to Apocalyptic: Impressions from QPF Stephen Wright , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , August 2018;

'In a scintillating talk organised by Express Media (and available on YouTube), the Dharug/Bundjalung poet Evelyn Araluen speaks of the production of literature as historically being a dangerous place for Aboriginal people. I heard her say this around the time I was reading Aileen Moreton-Robinson’s The White Possessive, Penny van Toorn’s Writing Always [sic] Arrives Naked and Gomeroi writer Alison Whittaker’s beautiful Lemons in the Chicken Wire. Araluen’s statement occupied my thinking for some months, and not just because I think it’s true. The essential aspect of resisting privilege, which white, middle-aged men like myself have been given in shedloads for free, is that the only way to address it is to continually have humbling experiences. And as we are unlikely to get such things from other white men – humiliation not being the same as being humbled – if we are not seeking out writers like Whittaker, Araluen or Moreton-Robinson, we’re making ourselves even more useless and obstructive than we already are.'  (Introduction)

1 y separately published work icon A Second Life Stephen Wright , Sydney : Seizure , 2017 11647343 2017 single work novella

'In a tiny book-lined office backing onto a supermarket in a small town in northern New South Wales, a woman named Acker sits smoking a cigarette and listening to the music of Philip Glass. Others come to her with their stories of violence and pain and through her writing she attempts to salvage what they have lost. A Second Life immerses the reader in a world that is both familiar and forbidding. It unfolds with horror and beauty to reveal a complicated and unforgettable portrait of a woman who moves through this world carrying secret histories, different ways of seeing, and many stories. 

'With a narrative voice that is at once eerily beautiful and slightly wild, and a premise that is surreal and ambitious, A Second Life stood out to me immediately. It's an exploration of the self and life and death, all of which comprise the psychological fabric of the main character, who occupies many selves and sometimes none at all.' (Publication summary)

1 The Last Word Stephanie Honor Convery , Alison Croggon , Sally J. Finn , Morgan Godfrey , Rachel Hennessy , Brendan Keogh , Benjamin Laird , Lucy Treloar , Stephen Wright , Jacinda Woodhead , 2015 single work column
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , October 2015;
'Burning thoughts on books, music, articles, TV shows, films, and other cultural ephemera from Overland’s writers and editors.' (Publication summary)
1 ‘The Most Fucking Intense, Crazy, Rock ’n’ Roll Thing You Could Be Writing about’ Stephen Wright , 2015 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland , Spring no. 220 2015; (p. 85-90)

'In the summer of 2013 I had a nightmare. At that time the cities of Australia were scorching in temperatures in the forties and immense bushfires had come to ravage the southern part of the continent year after year. For months I had been plagued by dreams of pursuit and murder, and in the unbearable summer heat my mind drifted in and out of sleep like flotsam near a desolate shore. I had thrown off the thin sheet covering me and in the midst of a dream in which I was haunted by a fear that I could not place, I heard someone outside of it say the word halal in a sinister tone and I woke up. The room was empty of course, but I was convinced that there had been someone standing over my bed.' (85)

1 On Being Funnier Stephen Wright , 2014 single work prose
— Appears in: Overland , Autumn no. 214 2014; (p. 78-79)
1 A Private Delirium Stephen Wright , 2013 single work prose
— Appears in: Overland , Winter no. 211 2013; (p. 48-49)
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