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y separately published work icon Beneath the Tree Line selected work   poetry  
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Beneath the Tree Line
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Jane Gibian’s poetry is remarkable for its clarity of perception and its sensitivity to the details and rhythms of life – whether in nature or in social routines. The poetry’s engagement is first and foremost with the natural environment, and with the contrast between the human engagement – with its extremes of fascination and despair – and the natural world itself, disinterested and unforgiving. The landscapes range from the coast to the forest, from rivers in urban settings to country towns and their surroundings. Their beauty is felt alongside their vulnerability to degradation. Throughout there is the awareness of connectedness, between people, places, seasons, animate and inanimate things – and the power of language to celebrate these connections, to register joy and constraint, and to draw on different kinds of reality. Later in the collection, Gibian’s poetry focuses on the passage of time and its vagaries, the ancient cycles of nature, the threat of change, personal histories, the fleeting moments of awareness captured in poems.'

Source : publisher's blurb

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Artarmon, North Sydney - Lane Cove area, Sydney Northern Suburbs, Sydney, New South Wales,: Giramondo Publishing , 2021 .
      image of person or book cover 8164279736268235919.jpg
      Image courtesy of publisher's website.
      Extent: 96p.p.
      Note/s:
      • Published August 2021.
      ISBN: 9781925818789

Works about this Work

Jane Gibian : Beneath the Treeline; Amanda Anastasi : The Inheritors Martin Duwell , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Review , no. 16 2021;

— Review of Beneath the Tree Line Jane Gibian , 2021 selected work poetry ; The Inheritors Amanda Anastasi , 2021 selected work poetry

'The author’s note which accompanies Jane Gibian’s Beneath the Tree Line begins by saying, “More and more I have become preoccupied with the natural world and our place in its increasingly precarious situation”. This together with the emphasis on those who will be stuck with our mess in Amanda Anastasi’s The Inheritors inevitably suggested their connection and a chance to round out, as it were, the emphases behind the books reviewed in my previous two posts. In fact, both books have more in them than an obsession with the cumulative toxic effects of the Anthropocene, Jane Gibian’s book, especially. Its five parts comprise five different perspectives on living which could be summarised, very crudely, as: living in the world, in language, in the digital age, the act of living in itself and living in the natural world.' (Introduction)

Jane Gibian : Beneath the Treeline; Amanda Anastasi : The Inheritors Martin Duwell , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Review , no. 16 2021;

— Review of Beneath the Tree Line Jane Gibian , 2021 selected work poetry ; The Inheritors Amanda Anastasi , 2021 selected work poetry

'The author’s note which accompanies Jane Gibian’s Beneath the Tree Line begins by saying, “More and more I have become preoccupied with the natural world and our place in its increasingly precarious situation”. This together with the emphasis on those who will be stuck with our mess in Amanda Anastasi’s The Inheritors inevitably suggested their connection and a chance to round out, as it were, the emphases behind the books reviewed in my previous two posts. In fact, both books have more in them than an obsession with the cumulative toxic effects of the Anthropocene, Jane Gibian’s book, especially. Its five parts comprise five different perspectives on living which could be summarised, very crudely, as: living in the world, in language, in the digital age, the act of living in itself and living in the natural world.' (Introduction)

Last amended 1 Jun 2021 16:46:38
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