Subhuman Redneck Poems

Subhuman Redneck Poems is a collection of poems by Australian writer Les Murray, published by Duffy and Snellgrove in 1996.[1]

Subhuman Redneck Poems
AuthorLes Murray
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry collection
PublisherDuffy and Snellgrove
Publication date
1996
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages104 pp.
Awards1997 winner Victorian Premier's Literary Awards — Prize for Poetry
ISBN1875989080

The collection contains 66 poems which were published in a variety of original publications, with some being published here for the first time.[2]

Contents

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  • "The Family Farmers' Victory"
  • "A Brief History"
  • "Where Humans Can't Leave and Mustn't Complain"
  • "Green Rose Tan"
  • "The Say-But-the-Word Centurion Attempts a Summary"
  • "Dead Trees in the DamiC
  • "Rock Music"
  • "The Rollover"
  • "Late Summer Fires"
  • "Corniche"
  • "Suspended Vessels"
  • "The Water Column"
  • "The Beneficiaries"
  • "The Maenads"
  • "The Portrait Head"
  • "Phrygia, Birthplace of Embroidery"
  • "Like Wheeling Stacked Water"
  • "Wallis Lake Estuary"
  • "Twin Towns History"
  • "The Sand Dingoes"
  • "On Home Beaches"
  • "Leash Chain"
  • "From Bennett's Head"
  • "The Bohemian Occupation"
  • "The Fossil Imprint"
  • "On the Present Slaughter of Feral Animals"
  • "Memories of the Height-to-Weight Ratio"
  • "Water-Gardening in an Old Farm Dam"
  • "The Suspension of Knock"
  • "It Allows a Portrait in Line-Scan at Fifteen"
  • "Performance"
  • "War Song"
  • "Australian Love Poem"
  • "Inside Ayers Rock"
  • "Each Morning Once More Seamless"
  • "Contested Landscape at Forsayth"
  • "The Shield-Scales of Heraldry"
  • "The Year of the Kiln Portraits"
  • "A Stage of Gentrification"
  • "Earth Tremor at Night"
  • "Waking Up on Tour"
  • "Tympan Alley"
  • "A Lego of Driving to Sydney"
  • "Burning Want"
  • "For the Sydney Jewish Museum : And Peter Wagner"
  • "The Last Hellos"
  • "Opening in England"
  • "My Ancestress and the Secret Ballot : 1848 and 1851"
  • "Comete"
  • "Dry Water"
  • "Life Cycle of Ideas"
  • "Cotton Flannelette"
  • "The Trances"
  • "The Devil"
  • "The Nearly Departed"
  • "The Warm Rain"
  • "For Helen Darville"
  • "Demo"
  • "Deaf Language"
  • "Reverse Light"
  • "The Genetic Galaxy"
  • "Blowfly Grass"
  • "Dreambabwe"
  • "Below Bronte House"
  • "The Head-Spider"
  • "Under the Banana Mountains"

Critical reception

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Writing in the Independent (UK) William Scammell noted: "If you like your politics in black and white, or Left and Right, Les Murray might be filed away, in his latest incarnation, as a reactionary mystic nationalist - an Australian Solzhenitsyn, perhaps - who babbles about God while sniping at the multicultural facts of modern life and smearing liberals with responsibility for half the horrors of the 20th century."[3]

Awards

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Notes

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  • Tony Stephens interviewed the author about this collection for The Sydney Morning Herald.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Subhuman Redneck Poems by Les Murray". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 15 October 2024.
  2. ^ "Austlit — Subhuman Redneck Poems by Les Murray". Austlit. Retrieved 15 October 2024.
  3. ^ ""Going down but not under"". The Independent, 6 October 1996, p32. ProQuest 312534465. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
  4. ^ ""1993-2015 The T. S. Eliot Prize"". .. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
  5. ^ ""'Drowner' awarded top prize "". The Age 18 October 1997, p14. ProQuest 2521622477. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
  6. ^ ""Return of the Redneck"". Sydney Morning Herald, 21 September 1996, p3s. ProQuest 2527356510. Retrieved 16 October 2024.