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y separately published work icon Borobudur single work   poetry  
Issue Details: First known date: 2009... 2009 Borobudur
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Notes

  • A book-length poem.
  • Dedication: To Zeno and Holly
  • Epigraph: Space is the abode of meditation/ Mountains are the brush, sea the ink/ And heaven and earth/ Are the case /Which holds the sutras
    The dawn moon and morning wind/ For clarity for sustenance/ A cupful of mountain river water/
    And if paradise is something/ Other then we imagined? - Kukai

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Yarraville, Footscray - Maribyrnong area, Melbourne - West, Melbourne, Victoria,: Transit Lounge , 2009 .
      image of person or book cover 5214833772632988177.jpg
      This image has been sourced from online.
      Extent: 128p.
      Description: illus.
      ISBN: 9780980461664

Works about this Work

Australian Writing and the Contemporary : Are We There Yet? Annee Lawrence , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Cultural Studies Review , April vol. 22 no. 1 2016; (p. 243–268)
'Australia’s geographical location (within ‘Asia’)—seen as a negative into the twenty-first century when the nation defined itself as culturally and aspirationally linked to the major Euro-American metropolitan cultural centres (the ‘West’)—must now be reevaluated. After two hundred years of white settlement and of turning its back on the region in which it is located, some Australian writers are writing texts that illuminate an aspect of Australian literature that is in transition, becoming, by definition, in, of, and with the region as well as in, of, and with present time. Art historian Terry Smith’s theory of the three currents of contemporary art, particularly the third current, suggests a new paradigm, a potential break from modernism, and a different kind of entanglement and interconnection in a world that is witnessing shifts in world power, voluntary and involuntary mass movements of people, and real time global communication technologies. Adrian Snodgrass and David Coyne’s application of hermeneutical theory to the architectural design studio via the metaphor of excursion and return illuminates some imaginative intersections, understandings and energies in three texts by Australian authors—Michelle De Kretser, Chi Vu and Jennifer Mackenzie. In Smith’s terms too, the texts perform original leaps of the imagination in their diversity, freshness, and ability to surprise and invite questions about literature’s potential to stir up prior understandings and invite new ways of being in the present. In terms of Giorgio Agamben’s definition of the contemporary, the three texts bring the reader to a plurality and intercultural connectedness that we have yet to fully recognise and live. They represent a line of flight towards a literary imaginary in Australian writing that is contemporary, locally grounded, but also regionally and globally entangled. ' (Publication abstract)
Exotic Charm in a Free Verse Story Geoff Page , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 10 April 2010; (p. 13)

— Review of Borobudur Jennifer Mackenzie , 2009 single work poetry
Stephen Atkinson Reviews Borobudur by Jennifer Mackenzie Stephen Atkinson , 2009 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , November no. 6 2009;

— Review of Borobudur Jennifer Mackenzie , 2009 single work poetry
Stephen Atkinson Reviews Borobudur by Jennifer Mackenzie Stephen Atkinson , 2009 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , November no. 6 2009;

— Review of Borobudur Jennifer Mackenzie , 2009 single work poetry
Exotic Charm in a Free Verse Story Geoff Page , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 10 April 2010; (p. 13)

— Review of Borobudur Jennifer Mackenzie , 2009 single work poetry
Australian Writing and the Contemporary : Are We There Yet? Annee Lawrence , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Cultural Studies Review , April vol. 22 no. 1 2016; (p. 243–268)
'Australia’s geographical location (within ‘Asia’)—seen as a negative into the twenty-first century when the nation defined itself as culturally and aspirationally linked to the major Euro-American metropolitan cultural centres (the ‘West’)—must now be reevaluated. After two hundred years of white settlement and of turning its back on the region in which it is located, some Australian writers are writing texts that illuminate an aspect of Australian literature that is in transition, becoming, by definition, in, of, and with the region as well as in, of, and with present time. Art historian Terry Smith’s theory of the three currents of contemporary art, particularly the third current, suggests a new paradigm, a potential break from modernism, and a different kind of entanglement and interconnection in a world that is witnessing shifts in world power, voluntary and involuntary mass movements of people, and real time global communication technologies. Adrian Snodgrass and David Coyne’s application of hermeneutical theory to the architectural design studio via the metaphor of excursion and return illuminates some imaginative intersections, understandings and energies in three texts by Australian authors—Michelle De Kretser, Chi Vu and Jennifer Mackenzie. In Smith’s terms too, the texts perform original leaps of the imagination in their diversity, freshness, and ability to surprise and invite questions about literature’s potential to stir up prior understandings and invite new ways of being in the present. In terms of Giorgio Agamben’s definition of the contemporary, the three texts bring the reader to a plurality and intercultural connectedness that we have yet to fully recognise and live. They represent a line of flight towards a literary imaginary in Australian writing that is contemporary, locally grounded, but also regionally and globally entangled. ' (Publication abstract)
Last amended 19 Apr 2016 09:19:00
Subjects:
  • Borobudur, Java,
    c
    Indonesia,
    c
    Southeast Asia, South and East Asia, Asia,
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