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Amy Hilhorst Amy Hilhorst i(8253917 works by)
Also writes as: Amy Lin
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 1 y separately published work icon Infinite Ends Amy Lin , Western Australia : WA Poets Inc , 2023 27618418 2023 selected work poetry

'This collection has come about from ten years of experimenting with poetic form, and the poems have grown with me through PhD candidature, moving out of home, getting married, and various travel adventures. The motivation behind each poem was essentially some act of exploration, of following an instinct by layering language until I arrived at a poetic text that rang true in my mind. The poems are at times speculative and fictional, but extend to the personal and autobiographical. Brought together under the title Infinite Ends, the collection's main preoccupations are the elegiac, the ekphrastic, poems of place centred on Lake Monger, Perth, Japan, Burma and elsewhere, and the classic and contemporary monuments that bridge our collective consciousness.' (Publication summary)

1 ‘Doomed Shapely Ersatz Thought’ : Francis Webb, Ward Two and the Language of Schizophrenia Amy Lin , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , May vol. 37 no. 1 2022;

'Francis Webb’s Ward Two is based on Webb’s hospitalisation for schizophrenia in Paramatta in the 1960s, and was the first Australian poetic sequence concerned with the experience of being institutionalised for mental illness. Whilst anti-psychiatrists condemn the harmful influence of psychiatry, and the social model of disability suggests that disability is a social construction, the poetry of Ward Two holds up the nuances of the institution, the society surrounding it and the disabilities suffered by those within. Through a dry, self-deprecating tone characteristic of mid-century Australian poets, and setting himself apart from the Romantics and American confessionals, Webb represents his speaker and other patients as holy, artistic and transcendental. Although the lines are self-consciously ironic, their sonic effects also suggest, in sincere celebration, that the psychiatric subjects have some spiritual quality that others lack. In this liminal space, those condemned by society – the mad, the gay and the mentally disabled – can recover their identities, thoughts and language, even through the process of losing them. While Foucault wrote that psychiatry is a monologue by reason about madness, Webb’s poetry is a monologue about madness by both reason and unreason, as his surrealist lines have the inventive leaps that align it with unreason, but they also have the calm mode of address and high order linguistics to align it with reason. This affords it a unique position through which it can speak about mental illness that sets it apart from the pathologising language of psychiatry, and the romanticising language of anti-psychiatry. I argue that Webb’s poems, synthesising beauty and pain through imagery, rhyme and metaphor, can depict the subtleties of the schizophrenic mind, and the harmful and healing aspects of psychiatry and the institution.' (Publication abstract)

1 Glass Onions, 1727 i "These onion bottles", Amy Lin , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 65 no. 2 2020; (p. 90-91)
1 Wreck of the Zeewijk i "X marks the spot", Amy Lin , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 65 no. 2 2020; (p. 86-87)
1 “Poetry Doesn’t Have to Be a Quick-anything” : A Conversation with TT.O. Amy Lin , 2020 single work column
— Appears in: Los Angeles Review of Books , April 2020;

'Australian poet TT.O. has been working on his latest epic poem, Heide, for about eight years. Heide the spiritual heart of Australian modernism in both poetry and art circles. The work marries times — past, present, and futures. It shows connections between art, politics, history, anarchism, poetry, struggles, the military, and his earlier works. It ranges across numerous biographies, and stands back to locate the whole in its epic grandeur; from the building of Melbourne as a city, to the establishment of its politics, art practice, poetry, and psychology. All the parts fit together, even when they fly off in different directions. It contains world history in both its writing and references. It takes off from where the Ern Malley Hoax bludgeoned Australian poetry into submission.' (Introduction)

1 Light as a Feather i "Before cigarettes, before sex or alcohol,", Amy Lin , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 64 no. 2 2019; (p. 56)
1 Heath Ledger’s Joker i "A caked face crumbles", Amy Lin , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , May no. 91 2019;
1 Unsettlement Amy Lin , 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January / February no. 408 2019; (p. 50)

'Anne Elvey’s White on White and Reneé Pettitt-Schipp’s The Sky Runs Right Through Us both offer ideas of unsettlement in contemporary Australia; Elvey’s is the unsettlement brought by the arrival of colonists, whereas Pettitt-Schipp explores the unsettlement associated with denying arrival. In White on White, Elvey explores the limitations and downfalls of colonialism, and the paradoxical act of ‘building a falling’ that settlement represents. Despite its title, the collection is about the co-existence of whiteness and colour, as in the line, ‘On my desk the whiteout / is shelved beside the pens’. This line is also telling as it is about imprints and markings existing beside modes of erasure. In the prose poem ‘School days’, readers are introduced to the speaker’s skin that is ‘peach and cream with a blue undernote […] the colour of my soul’, which a ‘drop of ink’ would mortally stain. Here, Elvey invokes a thread running through the collection: the potential for ink, the medium for writing and textuality, to be fraught with sin and moral complications. At these moments, readers may reflect on the fact that it was white settlers who brought written language to Australia, with all of its blessings and burdens.' (Introduction)

1 The Architecture of Grief i "Grieving for you is a large house with voided corridors of absence. Sounds", Amy Lin , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , November vol. 63 no. 2 2018; (p. 197)
1 Secondhand Bookstore i "Your own story suspends at the door with the dripping umbrellas. You enter, down steps to a basement of shelves, where customers orbit potential buys, drawn", Amy Lin , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Social Alternatives , vol. 37 no. 1 2018; (p. 58)
1 y separately published work icon Westerly : Crossings Online Special Issue 3 no. 3 Amy Hilhorst (editor), Owen Bullock (editor), 2017 12586382 2017 periodical issue

'This special issue of Westerly is a collaboration between the creative writing students of the University of Western Australia (UWA), and those from the International Poetry Studies Institute (IPSI), based at the University of Canberra (UC). It aims to showcase and celebrate the creative and critical work conducted by current or recent postgraduates, and undergraduates, at these two institutions. Reaching across the Nullarbor from west to east, this issue offers a snapshot of some of the best writing from the respective corners of Australia. In curating this material together, we aim to foreground the connections and contrasts in the stories of our students. These short stories, novel excerpts, essays and poems have been commissioned by co-editors who are also completing postgraduate study. It is, then, an issue for students and by students, and aims to give readers an insight into the exceptional standard of work being written in the postgrad study rooms, shared offices and library carrels of UWA and UC.' (Editorial introduction)

1 Anna Attinga Frafra i "the gentle assonance of her name", Amy Hilhorst , 2017 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 March vol. 57 no. 1 2017;
1 Rottnest, 1997 i "Dinked on handlebars", Amy Hilhorst , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 61 no. 1 2016; (p. 262-263)
1 Langkawi Airport i "On the wall at gate 4", Amy Hilhorst , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Verity La , May 2016;
1 Kaleidoscopic Jigsaw Puzzle Amy Hilhorst , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , January - March no. 17 2016;

— Review of Courland Penders : Coming Home Ronald Corlette-Theuil , 2014 single work criticism
1 Prose Poetry and Painting with Words : in Conversation with Paul Hetherington Amy Hilhorst (interviewer), 2016 single work interview
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 61 no. 2 2016; (p. 160-168)
1 Mt Fuji Sunrise i "Last year, my window", Amy Hilhorst , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly : New Creative , 26 September 2016; (p. 88-89)
1 Playing with Light and Dark : Amy Hilhorst Interviews David McCooey Amy Hilhorst (interviewer), 2016 single work interview
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , November no. 56.0 2016;
'I first became interested in David McCooey’s work while studying an Honours unit at the University of Western Australia, where for an assessment I responded to his essay on Chris Wallace-Crabbe’s poetry, only to learn that he too had taken the same unit some years before. David and I caught up on the UWA grounds, assailed by the mockery of kookaburras and occasional bursts of sunlight (literally star struck), to chat about the process of drafting his latest collection.' (Introduction)
1 'The Other World Where Things Alter' : Review of Philip Salom's Alterworld Amy Hilhorst , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 60 no. 2 2015; (p. 156-157)

— Review of Alterworld : Alterworld, Sky Poems, The Well Mouth Philip Salom , 2014 selected work poetry
1 Amy Hilhorst Reviews Conversations I've Never Had by Caitlin Maling Amy Hilhorst , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Writ. Poetry Review , September no. 3 2015;

— Review of Conversations I've Never Had Caitlin Maling , 2015 selected work poetry
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