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Ella Jeffery Ella Jeffery i(A149117 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Islands : New Ecopoetry by Kristen Lang and Caitlin Maling Ella Jeffery , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 436 2021; (p. 58-59)

— Review of Fish Work Caitlin Maling , 2021 selected work poetry ; Earth Dwellers Kristen Lang , 2021 selected work poetry
'New collections from Caitlin Maling and Kristen Lang are situated in vastly different landscapes but pursue similar ideas about the natural world’s fragility and the imminent environmental catastrophe. Maling’s Fish Work, as its title suggests, is primarily interested in marine life and the scientists studying it at Lizard Island Research Station on the Great Barrier Reef, while Lang’s Earth Dwellers explores mountains, caves, and coastlines in Tasmania and Nepal, examining the myriad complexities of ancient ecosystems. Maling’s and Lang’s new books, their fourth collections, urge readers to attend to the work of millennia that has produced these distinctive ecosystems and, in doing so, to appreciate the urgency of protecting them.' (Introduction)
1 Observer Effect : Three New Poetry Collections Ella Jeffery , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January–February no. 428 2021; (p. 54-55)

— Review of Harbour Kate Llewellyn , 2020 selected work poetry ; Airplane Baby Banana Blanket Benjamin Dodds , 2020 selected work poetry ; Recipe for Risotto Josephine Clarke , 2020 selected work poetry
1 Twenty-First-Century Australian Poetry Sarah Holland-Batt , Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature 2020;
1 Monopoly i "the landlord sold in under a fortnight.", Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: In Your Hands 2020; (p. 47-48)
This poem is in two numbered and titled parts.
1 Soldier Crabs i "This life is all fizz", Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 65 no. 2 2020; (p. 48-49)
1 4 y separately published work icon Dead Bolt Ella Jeffery , Waratah : Puncher and Wattmann , 2020 20769654 2020 selected work poetry

'This is a captivating and varied collection. No matter what Ella Jeffery turns her attention to, her subjects find sharp resolution in language that has been subtly crafted and beautifully honed. These poems carry their insights deftly and intensely, her lens always focussed on those alchemical images that move her work from sensation into perception, from observation into shimmering awareness. Everything shines with the gloss of her highly polished linguistic and imaginative skills. Her work is a triumph and a delight.
– Judith Beveridge


'As its title suggests, Dead Bolt is a meditation on home and its ability to become suddenly unhomely or uncanny. Ella Jeffery’s poetry ranges from the plangent and elegiac to the comic and satirical. It attends to both the eye and the ear; its extraordinary imagery is matched by a marvellous attention to poetry’s sonic capacity. Dead Bolt is a compelling, exquisitely realised debut. 
– David McCooey


'I love Ella Jeffery’s poetry. Like Elizabeth Bishop’s, it is companionable and unshowily surprising, and has perfect timing. Jeffery is clear-eyed and has a gift for the exact word, one that opens a rift. This is a masterly and original first collection—a major work.
– Lisa Gorton'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 Collaboration and Its Discontents : Considerations for Creative Writing HDR Students Collaborating on Traditional Research Outputs Alex Philp , Ella Jeffery , Lee McGowan , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 59 2020;
'Collaboration between creative writing researchers in the academy, and particularly the benefits and potential of HDR writing groups, are topics that have drawn increasing scholarly attention. Batty notes that while ‘creative writing is often seen as an isolated practice, it is also one in which practitioners crave connection and people with whom to share their ideas, for moral support and critical feedback’ (2016: 69). While collaboration is vital to developing new networks and communities, the development and maintenance of collaborative practice is often as complicated as it is productive. This article examines some of the deeper complexities of collaborating on traditional research outputs and considers the ways in which creative writing HDR students in particular can develop a range of strategies to navigate collaborative practice. Through reflecting upon several exemplars of collaborations experienced by the authors – including a HDR writing group – this article contends that collaboration is often more complex than the literature suggests. Rather than being conceptualised as an always generative, ideal model for producing research outputs, collaboration should instead be conceptualised, discussed in scholarship, and approached in ways that are as diverse, paradoxical, and fluid as collaborative endeavours are in practice.' (Publication abstract)
1 Writing and Rewriting Australia : ECR Collaboration in Designing and Delivering an Australian Literary Studies Unit Ella Jeffery , Mark Piccini , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 59 2020;
'Collaboration plays an increasingly important role in the academy, and for early career researchers (ECRs) is seen as a particularly central practice for developing community, increasing productivity and building a research profile. Collaborative practices are most frequently adopted in the research space, but we contend that there is also significant value in collaboration between ECRs in unit design and development, teaching-based areas that are traditionally the domain of a single academic. In this paper, we discuss our collaborative approach to the design of an Australian literary studies unit named Writing Australia, in which the Unit Coordinator, a full-time lecturer and ECR, shared the space of unit design and development with the ECR contracted to deliver the unit’s tutorials, a final-year PhD candidate. This approach enabled the unit’s tutor to acquire crucial skills that are required for academics roles, but the collaborative approach also resulted in the development of a unit that was itself far more focused on collaborative, multi-vocal delivery that asked students to engage with Australian literature not as a static body of texts, but as varied, diverse, and ever-evolving discussion about what it means to be Australian, as well as the ways in which Australia as an ideological edifice is endlessly constructed and reconstructed in our national literature.' (Publication abstract)
1 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series Creating Communities : Collaboration in Creative Writing and Research no. 59 October Lee McGowan (editor), Alex Philp (editor), Ella Jeffery (editor), 2020 20756512 2020 periodical issue 'An Early Career Researcher (ECR), a Higher Degree Research (HDR) candidate and an older researcher walk into a bar … a cliché perhaps, but we are keenly aware that this is all too often how discussions of collaborative endeavours begin. We are confident it is how a number of the contributions in this Special Issue began – the creation of informal spaces, opportunities and networks to make it possible is the focus of at least one article. The idea for a TEXT Special Issue centred on collaboration emerged when we, as three creative writing academics in different stages of our careers, began discussing not only how we collaborated, but why we did (or did not) do it. Our discussions ranged from the collaborative process as a means to build capacity, academic employability, and a research profile; to produce a sense of belonging in HDR communities; and to the deeply rewarding though at times challenging nuances of working with colleagues who are also friends. Collaborative endeavours raise questions of opportunity and innovation, and of power shifts and hierarchies, as well as of what we value as practitioners. The increasing pressure to publish placed on academics in all stages of their careers by both our institutions and the broader research environment demands further considerations. Questions raised in our early discussions are centred in this Special Issue. We ask: How does collaboration in our patch of the academy work? What are the possible benefits and challenges of collaborative practice? How do we build creative writing communities in the academy, and why should we?' (Lee McGowan, Alex Philp and Ella Jeffery, Introduction)
1 Blueprints : Constructing the Creative Writing PhD Ella Jeffery , Alex Philp , Emily O'Grady , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 17 no. 4 2020; (p. 391-401)

'This article uses architectural analogies to explore the complexities of planning and executing a practice-led PhD project in contemporary Australian writing. Many scholars and creative practitioners have conceived of the writing process as a form of building, scaffolding or construction. A PhD always involves some aspect of planning – but to what extent can the creative practice be planned for? What happens when the project outpaces the planning, or when a writer finds herself in unscaffolded space? This article examines practice-led research methodologies drawn from the experiences and insights of three creative practitioners who are also current and recently completed PhD candidates. Their perspectives reveal the multiplicity of approaches available in creative practice research and points to the opportunities to explore the complexities between structure, space and practice in discussions of the creative writing PhD.' (Publication abstract)

1 Desexing the Devon Rex i "She'll never be satisfied. Or is she permanently satisfied?", Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Island , no. 160 2020; (p. 67)
1 Hallways i "you pace out your relationship", Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Poetry Anthology 2020; (p. 162-163)
1 “The New Life” : Ella Jeffery on Beautiful Revolutionary by Laura Elizabeth Woollett Ella Jeffery , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , August no. 25 2020;

— Review of Beautiful Revolutionary Laura Woollett , 2018 single work novel

'Laura Elizabeth Woollett’s first novel, Beautiful Revolutionary, takes the reader into the lives of several members of the Peoples Temple, the socialist church created by the charismatic, manipulative and controlling preacher Jim Jones in California in the 1960s. The novel follows the church’s expansion in America and eventual mass exodus to Guyana where Jones and his devoted followers established a community, named Jonestown, deep in the jungle. There, on November 18, 1978, as a result of Jones’ increasing hysteria, drug use, and paranoia, Jones commanded his followers to commit what he describes in Woollett’s novel as ‘revolutionary suicide.’ The death of 918 Americans at Jonestown is an event that remains deeply embedded in the cultural imaginary, and Woollett’s novel is one of a number of recent works on the event, including Jeff Guin’s non-fiction book The Road to Jonestown (2017), the 2018 documentary Jonestown: Terror in the Jungle and upcoming HBO series Raven, based on a non-fiction account of the same title by Tim Reiterman (2008). When I began Beautiful Revolutionary, I was interested in how Woollett might add to this substantial body of work. What does this book have to give that other documentaries, television series and books on the subject haven’t covered in the 40 years since the event?' (Introduction)

1 Assumption i "This is the room", Ella Jeffery , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 64 no. 2 2019; (p. 10)
1 Pomegranate Ella Jeffery , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Grieve : Stories and Poems about Grief and Loss: Volume Seven 2019;
1 Meteorology i "I can predict the future. A little. And everyone loves", Ella Jeffery , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Griffith Review , no. 66 2019; (p. 191)
1 Alla Prima i "He is still the stillest hand, sure", Ella Jeffery , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 78 no. 3 2019; (p. 139)
1 y separately published work icon Stilts Stilts Journal Emily O'Grady (editor), Ella Jeffery (editor), Brisbane : Stilts Journal , 2018- 19480448 2018 periodical (8 issues)
1 Brunoise i "There is no smell to her. She is candlewax and a cake-batter", Ella Jeffery , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Southerly , December vol. 78 no. 3 2018; (p. 109)
1 Hotel Del Coronado i "The past is so easy to photograph.", Ella Jeffery , 2018 single work poetry
— Appears in: Westerly , November vol. 63 no. 2 2018; (p. 68)
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