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Melody Ellis Melody Ellis i(20329427 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 On the Holding of Spaces for Essaying Into Melody Ellis , Andy Jackson , Tina Stefanou , Peta Murray , Khalid Warsame , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , October no. 103 2021;

'It’s a putting oneself into a space of deliberate uncertainty. Stepping into the unknown. A practicing in that space. Training. It’s about thinking provisionally. Speaking small. Not for all.

'It’s about languaging. Being attentive to words, to meaning. To the meaning that can be smuggled in however unwittingly.

'It’s about taking seriously – which might have nothing whatsoever to do with being serious.'  (Introduction)

1 Motherhood, Language and the Everyday During the Poetry of Astrid Lorange, Amy Brown and L K Holt Melody Ellis , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , October no. 97 and 98 2020;

'For a long time after my daughter was born, I looked for representations of motherhood everywhere. I looked for it in casual interactions with other mothers in the park and on the street, I looked for it with friends, in mothers’ groups and on the screen. I looked for it in my memories of mothers (including my own), and I looked for it in books. In the first six-weeks or so after my daughter was born I tore through Elisa Albert’s After Birth and Rachel Cusk’s A Life’s Work. I remember them like balm, even though I cannot remember much of the content of either book now. I read and re-read Maya Angelou, Marguerite Duras, Julia Kristeva, Maggie Nelson and Adrienne Rich all of whom I had read before but reading them as a mother felt different. I read Elena Ferrante for the first time and was in awe at the way she wrote about mothers. I read Deborah Levy’s fiction and nonfiction and thought her novel Hot Milk would have been more satisfying had it been a nonfiction account of the central mother-daughter relationship (reading into that novel Levy’s complicated relationship with her mother). I heard the poet Rachel Zucker interviewed about her book MOTHERs on a parenting podcast and when I bought that book, I tore through it too. Again, balm. I read Jacqueline Rose’s Mothers: An Essay on Love and Cruelty and though aspects of the book annoyed me, I was grateful for it.' (Introduction)

1 Once, in a Story Melody Ellis , 2019 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2019;
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