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Jennifer Maiden's Intimate Geography charts territory both personal and political, private and global. Responding to international conflicts and crises, many of her poems probe moral dilemmas, confronting the existential, ethical problem of evil: why people commit inhuman acts. Always pointedly serious, her poems can also be flamboyant or risque, outrageously witty, or daringly provocative. They blur, challenge, and cross the boundaries between real and imagined, fact and fiction, inner lives and the world outside us.

Produktbeschreibung
Jennifer Maiden's Intimate Geography charts territory both personal and political, private and global. Responding to international conflicts and crises, many of her poems probe moral dilemmas, confronting the existential, ethical problem of evil: why people commit inhuman acts. Always pointedly serious, her poems can also be flamboyant or risque, outrageously witty, or daringly provocative. They blur, challenge, and cross the boundaries between real and imagined, fact and fiction, inner lives and the world outside us.
Autorenporträt
Jennifer Maiden was born in 1949 in Penrith, New South Wales, where she still lives. After starting to publish in the late 1960s, she took a BA at Macquarie University, and has been an active presence in the Sydney literary scene for the past four decades. Her first UK publication, "Intimate Geography: Selected Poems 1991-2010" (Bloodaxe Books, 2012) draws on her four most recent collections: "Acoustic Shadow" (Penguin Australia, 1993), "Mines" (Paper Bark, 1999), "Friendly Fire" (Giramondo, 2005) and "Pirate Rain" (Giramondo, 2010). She has published ten other books of poetry in Australia along with two novels, the second of which, "Play With Knives", was translated into German as "Ein Messer im Haus" (dtv, 1994). Among her many accolades are the NSW Premier's Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry (she is the only writer to have won this three times, most recently for "Pirate Rain"), the C.J. Dennis Prize for Poetry, the Harri Jones Memorial Prize, the H.M. Butterly-F.Earle Hooper Award (University of Sydney), the Grenfell Henry Lawson Festival Prize, the FAW Christopher Brennan Award for lifetime achievement in poetry, Melbourne Age Poetry Book of the Year (twice), and Melbourne Age Book of the Year. As well as writing and running writers' workshops with a variety of literary, community and educational organisations, she has co-written (with Margaret Cunningham) a manual of questions to facilitate writing by torture and trauma victims. She has had residencies at the Australian National University, the University of Western Sydney, Springwood High School and the New South Wales Torture and Trauma Rehabilitation Service, and has been awarded several Fellowships by the Australia Council.