CONTRIBUTORS

Joel Ephraims

Joel Ephraims is preparing to study a PhD in creative writing, researching conceptualist poetry. He completed an Honours thesis in English Literatures in 2016 that applied Michel Foucault’s theories of discourse, power and archaeology to the poetry of John Ashbery. His poems have appeared in Overland, The Marrickville Pause, Cordite, Otoliths, The Weekend Australian Review, Verity La and other places. He recently guest-edited issue six of The Marrickville Pause and reviewed Gareth Jenkins’s Recipes for the Disaster for Plumwood Mountain.

Joel Ephraims Reviews Ashbery Mode Edited by Michael Farrell

The presence of John Ashbery shines over contemporary literature, for many as an enigma, indisputably as a catalyst. Part of the post-World War II wave of new American poetry, his name is grouped not just alongside his contemporary poets but among their literary schools and movements: the L-A-N-G-U-A-G-E school, the New York School, the San Francisco Renaissance, the Beats, the Black Mountain poets, our own ’68ers and J.A.

Posted in BOOK REVIEWS | Tagged , , , , , , , , ,

The Little Guys

After James Tate A premium trolley had pulled up in aisle four and was accepting passengers for half price. Pierce Brosnan was pushing this one today and thousands were lined up in snaking lines that stretched out of the metropolis …

Posted in 96: NO THEME IX | Tagged

Upon the Passing of Tomas Tranströmer

The world has come up to my window to tell me it’s not too late to tell me yes yes you too are still alive The gods and demons of the Śatapathabrāhmaṇa have left their eye lids along with their …

Posted in 95: EARTH | Tagged

Monologue of the Terminator

If you want the guise of a sparrow, you must work to achieve it. Laziness is the bane of your generation. Why do you think the ancestors of the trap door spiders had such fine, romantic legs? I worked in …

Posted in 75: FUTURE MACHINES | Tagged