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Stephanie Green Stephanie Green i(A30973 works by)
Born: Established: 1959
c
Papua New Guinea,
c
Pacific Region,
;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Stars i "Your stars are not the same as mine but sometimes I look up just the same. In the silver-iced north,", Stephanie Green , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Axon : Creative Explorations , July vol. 11 no. 1 2021;
1 Holding it Together i "At the cusp between opening and closure,", Stephanie Green , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Axon : Creative Explorations , July vol. 11 no. 1 2021;
1 An Unforgettable Dining Experience Stephanie Green , 2021 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , April vol. 25 no. 1 2021;
1 Emblematic Spaces : Postcoloniality and the Region Stephanie Green , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature 2020;
1 December i "The dry winds of early summer scatter dead leaves to my door.", Stephanie Green , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry 2020; (p. 86)
1 1 Screen/Mirror Stephanie Green , 2020 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 58 2020;
1 Residue i "This season I’m more aware of the fallout.", Stephanie Green , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Not Very Quiet , March no. 6 2020;
1 2 y separately published work icon Breathing in the Stormy Seasons Stephanie Green , Canberra : Recent Work Press , 2019 18577497 2019 selected work poetry

'These prose poems – I would like to call them ‘moments of poetry – recall journeys and intimacies, spaces of habitation, daily practices of denial, rescue affection or assertation. They reflect on negotiations between body and mind that can so fiercely mark the experience of womanhood, striving to capture the intermittent intensity of this ‘boundless resistance’ through the impact of summer and winter storms.'

Source: Afterword.

1 The Scent of Things : Travel and the Traces of the Past Stephanie Green , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 56 2019;
'Encounters with the historical and contemporary materiality of travel may occur objectively and/or imaginatively, as the traveller moves by air, land or water, passes streets, squares, buildings, enters rooms, museums, palaces, crosses bridges, mountains, canyons. Even other people can present as material entities, encapsulating the shock of difference, the flesh and odours of lived reality, the impossibility of possession. However prepared for a journey by reading, thinking, and research, in the end, for the writer as traveller, it is the act of travel while writing itself which becomes the heuristic enterprise, the experiment which leads to a solution, an understanding or a new question that may never be definitively solved. This discussion explores the representability of travel writing as material engagement and as a creative endeavour of scholarly inquiry. The presentation will take the form of a framed auto/narrative which follows a sequence of journeys undertaken by the author, in reverse order that speak to questions of authenticity and illusion across space and time.' (Publication abstract)
1 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series RE-mapping Travel Writing in the 21st Century no. 56 October Stefan Jatschka (editor), Stephanie Green (editor), Nigel Krauth (editor), 2019 18270462 2019 periodical issue 'This special issue of TEXT invited scholars and creative writing academics from universities across four continents to create new pieces which emphasised current developments in, and the evolving significance of, travel writing in the 21st century.' (Stefan Jatschka, Stephanie Green and Nigel Krauth, Introduction)
1 To Start Again Is the Hardest Thing Stephanie Green , 2017 single work prose
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 46 2017;
1 Writing and Romantic Exile Hasti Abbasi , Stephanie Green , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 41 2017;

'This paper will investigate creative dislocation and the idea of the writer as exiled self through reflections on the traction and slippages between ideas of place, dislocation and writing. For a writer, producing creative work through the experience of dislocation, whether voluntary or enforced, can be isolating and difficult, but it can also bring new perspectives and opportunities for creative capacity and expression. The creative resonances of writing in exile will be explored here with reference to David Malouf’s celebrated novella An Imaginary Life (1978) in which he depicts exile as a necessary journey of becoming, a ‘dynamic marginality’ as Braidotti observes (2002: 129), which offers creative possibility rather than closure and loss. For the writer Ovid, dislocation is phenomenological prerequisite for selftransformation. His discovery is that the writer must always be at the edge of things, noticing differently, available to possibility, able to embody and to channel being as metamorphoses through creative expression.' (Publication abstract)

1 The Condition of Recognition : Gothic Intimations in Andrew McGahan's The White Earth Stephanie Green , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , June vol. 23 no. 1 2016; (p. 84-94)

'This article discusses the evocation of the Gothic as a narrative interrogation of the intersections between place, identity and power in Andrew McGahan's The White Earth (2004). The novel deploys common techniques of Gothic literary fiction to create a sense of disassociation from the grip of a European colonial sensibility. It achieves this in various ways, including by representing its central architectural figure of colonial dominance, Kuran House, as an emblem of aristocratic pastoral decline, then by invoking intimations of an ancient supernatural presence which intercedes in the linear descent of colonial possession and, ultimately, by providing a rational explanation for the novel's events. The White Earth further demonstrates the inherently adaptive qualities of Gothic narrative technique as a means of confronting the limits to white belonging in post-colonial Australia by referencing a key historical moment, the 1992 Mabo judgment, which rejected the concept of terra nullius and recognised native title under Australian common law. At once discursive and performative, the sustained way in which the work employs the tropic power of Gothic anxiety serves to reveal the uncertain terms in which its characters negotiate what it means to be Australian, more than 200 years after colonial invasion.' (Publication abstract)

1 y separately published work icon Shadow Memories Stephanie Green , Victoria : Insula , 2015 9166000 2015 selected work poetry

'Selected Poems by Stephanie Green with some drawings by James Yuncken' (Source: Angus & Robertson Bookworld website)

1 Australian Literature and Summer - Books That Sizzle Stephanie Green , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 14 January 2014;

— Review of The Fortunes of Richard Mahony Henry Handel Richardson , 1917 single work novel ; The Swan Book Alexis Wright , 2013 single work novel ; Eyrie Tim Winton , 2013 single work novel ; Boy, Lost : A Family Memoir Kristina Olsson , 2013 single work biography ; Barracuda Christos Tsiolkas , 2013 single work novel
1 The Edge : Notes for a Wiki Narrative Stephanie Green , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 15 2012;
1 Passengers of History Stephanie Green , 2012 single work prose travel
— Appears in: Griffith Review , Spring no. 37 2012; (p. 119-129)
1 The Deflected Subject : Ethics, Objects and Writing Stephanie Green , 2012 single work criticism
— Appears in: Axon : Creative Explorations , March vol. 1 no. 2 2012;
'This discussion explores deflection as a narrative tactic for memoir writing, based on using material objects as sites of subjectivity. As a way of grounding this discussion, I employ the example of my own brief memoir ‘Antidote’, a fictionalised account of a collector and his collection, which provides the foundation for the story. In ‘Antidote’ I approach my account obliquely, as a restorative inventory. As I argue, however, it is not only the process of writing and remembering that provides a source of renewal. Rather, the objects themselves offer a mechanism of restoration. While imbued with ambiguity, they are an anchor against the constant slippage between the old world and the new. Roland Barthes has argued that the material details of a story can never denote the real: ‘all that they do … is to signify it’ (1989: 148) In ‘Antidote’ the assembled objects, the place that holds them and the collector who gathered them all exist. Even so, arguably, it is the selection and provenance of these objects, whether known or unknown, and their framing in language, that bring them into the realm of fabula and give narrative life to their form.' (Publication summary)
1 Antidote Stephanie Green , 2012 single work short story
— Appears in: Axon : Creative Explorations , March vol. 1 no. 2 2012;
1 The Mountain i "Below the pinnacle", Stephanie Green , 2010 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Green Fuse 2010; (p. 91)
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