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Jenny Fraser Jenny Fraser i(A116184 works by) (a.k.a. Jennifer Fraser)
Born: Established: 1971 Mareeba, Mareeba area, Mareeba - Atherton - Ravenshoe area, Ingham - Cairns area, Queensland, ;
Gender: Female
Heritage: Aboriginal ; Aboriginal Bundjalung ; Aboriginal Yugambeh / Yugumbir
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Works By

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1 [Untitled Tanka] Jenny Fraser , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Eucalypt : A Tanka Journal , no. 33 2022; (p. 24)
1 [Untitled] Jenny Fraser , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Eucalypt : A Tanka Journal 2021; (p. 30)
1 [Untitled] Jenny Fraser , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Eucalypt : A Tanka Journal , no. 30 2021; (p. 42)
1 y separately published work icon Plant Power Sisterhood : An Anthology of Eco-revolution Jenny Fraser (editor), Baltimore : Akinoga Press , 2020 23385638 2020 anthology poetry

'Plant Power Sisterhood: an anthology of eco-revolution is akinoga press’s first ever anthology and first collection of Indigenous writers. In Plant Power Sisterhood, editor Jenny Fraser and fellow contributors celebrate the flora and fauna of Australia and the Pacific Islands and challenge us to not only think critically about our own relationship with the Earth, but also urge us to seek out a place of reverence of and harmony with our silblinghood of the natural world.'

Source: Akinoga Press.

1 Plant Power : An Update for Assata Shakur i "This is the 3rd Millennium and we are now redefining revolution.", Jenny Fraser , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Rabbit , no. 32 2020; (p. 114-115)
1 Some Burned. Some Danced. Some Moved On. Jenny Fraser , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Narrative Witness 2 2016;
'Pictured shortly before the uprising of the autonomous State of Bama Land circa 2015, we can see the differing responses to the split, from separate citizen groups at the time. Some burned, some danced, some moved on. They say Bama leaders of the Far North in Queensland were fed up with seeing few of the benefits of the wealth generated in the engine room of the North, which instead were being redirected to the state's population-heavy southeast. ...'
2 Sorry for Belonging Alhwarrpe anetyeke Anekenge i "Sorry for belonging", Jenny Fraser , 2010 single work poetry
— Appears in: This Country Anytime Anywhere : An Anthology of New Indigenous Writing from the Northern Territory 2010; (p. 72)

— Appears in: This Country Anytime Anywhere : An Anthology of New Indigenous Writing from the Northern Territory 2010; (p. 73)
1 2 form y separately published work icon Everything Looks Beautiful Jenny Fraser , ( dir. Jenny Fraser ) Australia : Panangka Productions , 2010 Z1740364 2010 single work film/TV 'A short film edited to the song titled Everything Looks Beautiful by Shellie Morris. A mother agrees to a father taking his daughter south to a beach side camp for a long weekend. They end up on a road trip, a very long drive, around 3000km further north. Source: www.colourise.com.au/ (Sighted 08/11/2010)
1 A Bebro Conversation with Jenny Fraser and Shigeyuki Kihara Jenny Fraser (interviewer), 2008 single work interview
— Appears in: Hand in Hand: Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Maori, Niuean and Fijian Artists from Australia and Beyond 2008; (p. 10-12)
1 1 y separately published work icon Hand in Hand: Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Maori, Niuean and Fijian Artists from Australia and Beyond Jenny Fraser , Shigeyuki Kihara , Leichhardt : Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative , 2008 Z1631444 2008 single work prose poetry interview
1 1 form y separately published work icon other[wize] Jenny Fraser , ( dir. Jenny Fraser ) Brisbane : Panangka Productions , 2007 Z1507953 2007 single work film/TV

The screen-based project celebrates the lives of Yugambeh family members who were moved from their traditional homelands in south-east Queensland to work on properties in the Gulf of Carpentaria.

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