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July - December 2009 - The University of Adelaide

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Creative Writing Program, the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong><br />

News and Events: <strong>July</strong> to November <strong>2009</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> Creative Writing Program is delighted to announce a series <strong>of</strong> Masterclasses in 2010.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Masterclasses will run for five days from 23 - 27 August 2010. Workshops will be run by<br />

acclaimed visiting writers Helen Garner and Gail Jones, as well as the Creative Writing<br />

Program's own award-winning writers Brian Castro and Jill Jones. To pre-register your<br />

interest in the Masterclasses please email creativewriting@adelaide.edu.au. Full information,<br />

including program and fees, will be available soon.<br />

Joel Magarey's Exposure: a journey is now out through Wakefield Press. Exposure is a<br />

funny memoir <strong>of</strong> adventure and love with a sharp psychological edge. Joel Magarey<br />

completed a Masters <strong>of</strong> Creative Writing in 1999. He wrote the first draft <strong>of</strong> Exposure as part<br />

<strong>of</strong> his Masters.<br />

<strong>The</strong> latest issue <strong>of</strong> Meanjin (68,4) features new fiction from PhD candidate Maya Linden<br />

and PhD graduate Patrick Allington. It also features editor Sophie Cunningham interviewing<br />

Visiting Research Fellow (and former Creative Writing lecturer and writer in residence) Eva<br />

Hornung.<br />

Out <strong>of</strong> the Box: contemporary Australian Gay and Lesbian Poets (Puncher and Wattmann),<br />

edited by Jill Jones and Michael Farrell, was launched in November. <strong>The</strong> first book <strong>of</strong> its<br />

kind, it includes contemporary poems by established and emerging Australian gay and<br />

lesbian poets writing now in the freedoms and dangers <strong>of</strong> the 21st century. Poets include<br />

David Malouf, Dorothy Porter, Peter Rose, Pam Brown, Chris Edwards, Lee Cataldi, Miriel<br />

Lenore, Martin Harrison, Joanne Burns, Bel Schenk, Kate Lilley, and many others, as well as<br />

poems by the two editors, Michael Farrell and Jill Jones. <strong>The</strong> book includes introductory<br />

essays from each editor, featuring personal and historical perspectives and close reading <strong>of</strong><br />

some <strong>of</strong> the poems.<br />

Several postgraduate candidates have read work-in-progress on Writers Radio, broadcast<br />

across Australia via the Community Radio Network. In November Ken Bolton read his poem<br />

'God <strong>of</strong> trieste' and Sandy Verschoor read from Sea Acres. In October Shannon Burns read<br />

his poem '<strong>The</strong> Beach', Maya Linden read from her novel-in-progress Anatomy <strong>of</strong> the Upper<br />

Body, and Stephanie Hester read from her novel-in-pogress Hungry Ghosts. In September<br />

Lauren Lovett read her story 'Kids who Kick Dogs'.<br />

Festival news: Brian Castro (<strong>The</strong> Bath Fugues), Jill Jones (Broken/Open) and Carol<br />

Lefevre (If You Were Mine) will all be participating in the 2010 <strong>Adelaide</strong> Writers' Week.<br />

Patrick Allington (Figurehead) will be in participating in the 2010 Sydney Writers' Festival<br />

and Wordstorm, the Northern Territory Writers' Festival.<br />

PhD graduate Cath Kenneally's new novel, Jetty Road, has been published by Wakefield<br />

Press. Jetty Road is an amusing and insightful novel about women <strong>of</strong> a certain age, kids and<br />

oldies - about life actually, and how we never really grow into it.


Congratulations to Shannon Burns, PhD candidate, who is winner <strong>of</strong> the inaugural <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Adelaide</strong> Review/<strong>The</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong> short story competition. Shannon's winning<br />

story was published in the October issue <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review. MA by coursework<br />

graduate Rebekah Clarkson was one <strong>of</strong> several runners-up.<br />

Jamaican-born poet and short story writer Olive Senior was writer-in-residence from August<br />

to September <strong>2009</strong>. Olive Senior is the author <strong>of</strong> over a dozen books <strong>of</strong> poetry, fiction and<br />

non-fiction; her latest is the poetry book Shell. Her novel Dancing Lessons will be published<br />

in spring 2011. Her short story collection Summer Lightning won the Commonwealth Writers<br />

Prize and her poetry book Over the Ro<strong>of</strong>s <strong>of</strong> the World was shortlisted for Canada's<br />

Governor-General's Award for Literature. Her other books include Arrival <strong>of</strong> the Snake-<br />

Woman, Discerner <strong>of</strong> Hearts (fiction); Talking <strong>of</strong> Trees, Gardening in the Tropics (poetry);<br />

Working Miracles: Women's Lives in the English Speaking Caribbean and <strong>The</strong> Encyclopedia<br />

<strong>of</strong> Jamaican Heritage.<br />

At the 2010 South Australian Writers' Festival, postgraduate coursework student Alexia<br />

Champion was the winner <strong>of</strong> the youth section <strong>of</strong> the Wirra Wirra Short Story Competition.<br />

People's Choice Awards: as part <strong>of</strong> the South Australian Writers' Festival, thirty book<br />

groups read and reviewed six books by emerging South Australian writers. Of the six books,<br />

four were written by Creative Writing program students and/or graduates: Nine Hours North<br />

by Tim Sinclair, Sweet Guy by Jared Thomas, Nights in the Asylum by Carol Lefevre and<br />

<strong>The</strong> Quakers by Rachel Hennessy. <strong>The</strong> People's Choice Award was won by Carol Lefevre.<br />

Independent Melbourne publisher Ilura Press is proud to be producing Etchings Indigenous, a<br />

publication promoting the work <strong>of</strong> Indigenous writers and artists. <strong>The</strong> entire publication will<br />

be produced by Indigenous members <strong>of</strong> the community under the mentorship <strong>of</strong> Ilura Press<br />

editors and staff. Etchings Indigenous will be modelled on Etchings, blending short fiction,<br />

essays, poetry, art, and photography. Project Coordinator for Etchings Indigenous is Coral<br />

Reeve, a member <strong>of</strong> the Gunditjmara nation. Ilura Press was founded by Sabina Hopfer and<br />

Christopher Lappas, both graduates <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong>'s Phd in Creative Writing.<br />

Senior Lecturer and award-winning poet Jill Jones and PhD graduate and Writers Radio host<br />

Cath Kenneally are both represented in a new anthology Motherlode: Australian Women's<br />

Poetry 1986 - 2008, edited by Jennifer Harrison and Kate Morrison.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most recent Wordfire was held on Tuesday 25th August at the Crown & Sceptre Hotel,<br />

308 King William Street. Following on from the SALA festival, some readings were on the<br />

theme <strong>of</strong> visual art. <strong>The</strong> program included Olive Senior, Jared Thomas, Jill Jones reading<br />

alongside photographic images by Annette Willis, Rosemary Jones, Chelsea Avard, and<br />

Emma Carmody.<br />

Cassie Harrex is the <strong>2009</strong> winner <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review/Penny's Hill Prize for Food<br />

Writing <strong>2009</strong> - awarded to the most outstanding student in the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong>'s<br />

Graduate Certificate in Food Writing program. Harrex's evocative article about the Spanish<br />

resort town <strong>of</strong> San Sebastian, 'Pintxos Nights', was published in the August <strong>2009</strong> edition <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review. Harrex writes about San Sebastian's great tradition <strong>of</strong> pintxos: ‘<strong>The</strong>se<br />

are the Basque version <strong>of</strong> tapas, each just a mouthful, and they are piled high between the<br />

beer taps and wine bottles on almost every bar countertop throughout the city.' Read the full<br />

article here.


<strong>The</strong> Discipline <strong>of</strong> English, including Creative Writing, is continuing its Seminar Program in<br />

Semester 2, <strong>2009</strong>. Seminars will be presented by Marion Halligan, Jennifer Harrison and<br />

Kate Waterhouse, Susan Sheridan, Patrick Allington, Olive Senior, Kate Douglas,<br />

Deirdre Coleman, Gillian Whitlock, Anne Brewster, Robert Phiddian, Lyn McCredden<br />

and Maya Linden. Full details, including times and seminar titles, are listed on the Seminar<br />

Program.<br />

Sean Williams has been awarded this year's Peter McNamara Achievement Award. <strong>The</strong> Peter<br />

McNamara Achievement Award is an annual award given to a pr<strong>of</strong>essional in the Australian<br />

Science Fiction field in remembrance <strong>of</strong> the life and contribution <strong>of</strong> Peter Trevor McNamara.<br />

Sean comments, 'I was surprised, delighted, and deeply moved to receive the Mac this year.<br />

Peter published my first novel, as well as some <strong>of</strong> my earliest short stories, and played a very<br />

significant role in shaping me as a writer. He was also a very good friend, and is greatly<br />

missed. I'm honoured to be among the other recipients <strong>of</strong> the award, who include some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

best writers and editors in Australia.'<br />

Issue 7 <strong>of</strong> Etchings, Chameleons, is now available. Etchings is a creative magazine with an<br />

international focus, dedicated to showcasing new work by emerging and established writers<br />

and artists. Etchings is published by Ilura Press, founded by Creative Writing PhD graduates<br />

Sabina Hopfer and Christopher Lappas.<br />

Patrick Allington's novel, Figurehead, was launched by J.M. Coetzee at the SA Writers'<br />

Centre, on Wednesday 29 <strong>July</strong> at 6.30pm. Patrick Allington was also <strong>July</strong>'s guest blogger on<br />

the Black Inc. Blog, <strong>The</strong> Inc. Blot.<br />

ENTRIES NOW CLOSED. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review, in association with the Creative Writing<br />

Program, is proud to announce the first Annual Short Fiction Competition. This annual<br />

competition aims to encourage the art <strong>of</strong> short fiction writing, to set new standards in<br />

contemporary short fiction and to be one <strong>of</strong> Australia's most prestigious writing awards. <strong>The</strong><br />

competition features an international judging panel consisting <strong>of</strong> prize-winning Australian<br />

author and Chair <strong>of</strong> the Creative Writing Program, Brian Castro, Noel Laureate J.M.<br />

Coetzee and Jamaican poet and short story writer Oliver Senior. Entry forms and full terms<br />

and conditions are available from the <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review. <strong>The</strong> Creative Writing Program is<br />

delighted to be beginning a fruitful new collaboration with the <strong>Adelaide</strong> Review.<br />

Unbound, a conference dedicated to postgraduate and academic research from English &<br />

Creative Writing at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Adelaide</strong>, was held on 9-10th <strong>July</strong> in Napier GO3. For<br />

more details see the Unbound conference program.<br />

Issue 15 <strong>of</strong> Wet Ink: the magazine <strong>of</strong> new writing is now available. It includes poetry by<br />

Stephen Lawrence and Tom Shapcott, Dominique Wilson's interview with Thomas<br />

Keneally and the usual invigorating mix <strong>of</strong> fiction, essay, poetry, reviews and photography.

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