Poet, Tree: Martin Harrison's "Red Gum"
Keywords:
Martin Harrison, contemporary poetry, ecopoetryAbstract
This essay argues that Martin Harrison's "Red Gum" (1997) showcases a phenomenological approach to natural and built environments that anticipates later developments in what would now be called ecopoetics. First, the essay analyzes the poem's rhetoric, imagery, and intertextuality, especially its half-buried allusions to David Campbell's Branch of Dodona (1970). Then, it explores the possible impact of the digital communications revolution on "writing ecology" by comparing "Red Gum" to a more recent poem, Fiona Hile's "Stripes" (2013).Downloads
Published
2018-11-22
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How to Cite
Poet, Tree: Martin Harrison’s "Red Gum". (2018). Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, 18(2), 1-11. https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/JASAL/article/view/11579