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'In the 1940s, behavioural psychologists and developmental biologists working in the nascent field of epigenetics coined the term “maze-bright” to describe laboratory rats displaying a marked proficiency in maze navigation. Since then, the term has been deployed across a range of contexts, most notably in HR parlance to describe ‘attractive hires’.
This suite of poems seizes on the semantic pluripotency of its titular motif, transposing it into the early twenty-first century cultural keys of gaming (“パックマン Étude”), cinema (“Magic Hour, LA”, “Cinemetabolic”), finance and insurance (“To His Coy Investor”, “Act of God”), extreme sports (“Wingsuit Journal”), psychogeography (“Citicity”), post-colonial deracination (“Nick Cave at Buckingham Palace”) and others.' (Publication summary)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Christopher Brown Reviews Maze Bright by Jaya Savige
2015
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , April no. 17 2015;
— Review of Maze Bright 2014 selected work poetry -
A Reader Runner in a Maze Bright : Hamish Danks Brown Reviews ‘Maze Bright’ by Jaya Savige
2014
single work
review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , June - September no. 12 2014;
— Review of Maze Bright 2014 selected work poetry
-
A Reader Runner in a Maze Bright : Hamish Danks Brown Reviews ‘Maze Bright’ by Jaya Savige
2014
single work
review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , June - September no. 12 2014;
— Review of Maze Bright 2014 selected work poetry -
Christopher Brown Reviews Maze Bright by Jaya Savige
2015
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , April no. 17 2015;
— Review of Maze Bright 2014 selected work poetry