Since the publication of his first poetry collection Kargun in 1980, Lionel Fogarty has produced some of the most complex, playful and strident poems written in English, and has been regarded by some as the greatest Aboriginal Australian poet of his generation.
About the Author: Philip Morrissey (senior editor) is the former Academic Coordinator, Australian Indigenous Studies within the School of Culture and Communication at The University of Melbourne, Australia.
278 Pages
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Series Name: Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics
Description
Book Synopsis
Since the publication of his first poetry collection Kargun in 1980, Lionel Fogarty has produced some of the most complex, playful and strident poems written in English, and has been regarded by some as the greatest Aboriginal Australian poet of his generation. While over the course of his career, Fogarty has had relatively little recognition in awards or grants, recent attention to his work suggests a new turn in how his poetry is read and understood in Australia and overseas. Emerging from these conversations, Lionel Fogarty in Poetry and Politics illuminates the craft and art of Fogarty's poetry in hand with his political activism in order to open his work for new readers and researchers. Bringing together a wide range of critical and creative voices in the first book-length study of Fogarty's work, this essay collection represents a landmark moment for the study of Indigenous studies, poetry and poetics, Australian literature, and for future work on Fogarty's poetry.
Winner of the 2025 Australian University Heads of English Prize for Literary Scholarship.
From the Back Cover
Since the publication of his first poetry collection Kargun in 1980, Lionel Fogarty has produced some of the most complex, playful and strident poems written in English, and has been regarded by some as the greatest Aboriginal Australian poet of his generation. While over the course of his career, Fogarty has had relatively little recognition in awards or grants, recent attention to his work suggests a new turn in how his poetry is read and understood in Australia and overseas. Emerging from these conversations, Lionel Fogarty in Poetry and Politics illuminates the craft and art of Fogarty's poetry in hand with his political activism in order to open his work for new readers and researchers. Bringing together a wide range of critical and creative voices in the first book-length study of Fogarty's work, this essay collection represents a landmark moment for the study of Indigenous studies, poetry and poetics, Australian literature, and for future work on Fogarty's poetry.
Philip Morrissey (senior editor) is the former Academic Coordinator, Australian Indigenous Studies within the School of Culture and Communication at The University of Melbourne, Australia. He has coedited a number of essay collections and poetry anthologies, including Kim Scott: Readers, language, interpretation (2019), Reading the Country: 30 years on (2018) and Lionel Fogarty: Selected poems 1980-2017 (2017).
Dashiell Moore is a DECRA Fellow in English and Writing at the University of Sydney, Australia. A prominent researcher in world literature, his first book, The Literary Mirroring of Aboriginal Australia and the Caribbean (2024), examined the relationship between Indigeneity and creolisation in Aboriginal Australian and Caribbean literature.
About the Author
Philip Morrissey (senior editor) is the former Academic Coordinator, Australian Indigenous Studies within the School of Culture and Communication at The University of Melbourne, Australia. He has coedited a number of essay collections and poetry anthologies, including Kim Scott: Readers, language, interpretation (2019), Reading the Country: 30 years on (2018) and Lionel Fogarty: Selected poems 1980-2017 (2017).
Dashiell Moore is a DECRA Fellow in English and Writing at the University of Sydney, Australia. A prominent researcher in world literature, his first book, The Literary Mirroring of Aboriginal Australia and the Caribbean (2024), examined the relationship between Indigeneity and creolisation in Aboriginal Australian and Caribbean literature.
Dimensions (Overall): 8.27 Inches (H) x 5.83 Inches (W) x .69 Inches (D)
Weight: 1.13 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 278
Genre: Literary Criticism
Sub-Genre: Poetry
Series Title: Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Format: Hardcover
Author: Dashiell Moore & Philip Morrissey
Language: English
Street Date: May 17, 2025
TCIN: 1004579933
UPC: 9783031821585
Item Number (DPCI): 247-13-9251
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Estimated ship weight: 1.13 pounds
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