posts by Jennifer Mills
jennifer mills (www.jenjen.com.au) is the author of the novel The Diamond Anchor (UQP 2009), and a chapbook of poems, Treading Earth (Press press 2009). Her award-winning short stories, poetry and essays have been widely published. She lives in Alice Springs.
Thanks, newmatilda
Tragedy strikes Australian independent media: newmatilda will cease to publish in a month. As the editorial states, the reasons are financial. Advertising has not risen to meet the losses from subscriptions.
The publication has gone from strength to strength in every other way, with readership doubling every year for the last three years. NM has consistently tackled the issues that are being overlooked, and rapidly become one of the few outlets for investigative journalism in a changing media climate.
I started writing for NM in its early days around 2005, and have always felt very loyal to the site. Not only because the editor, Marni Cordell, is a friend, but because the editorial vision, genuine support for media diversity and quality journalism, and humour have been such a wonderful staple in my media diet. I have also appreciated the fearlessness and willingness to take risks – with content, structure, and delivery. Plus they paid me. Which is important as hell. ... read more
Written by Jennifer Mills on 27-05-2010, No comments
How about radical success?
Interesting piece by US academic and poet Joshua Corey (spotted via Currajah) on poetry, institutional support, gatekeepers, and the relationship between what we make and how we make it. It has given me a lot to think about in terms of the ongoing strategies of radical writer-reader relationships.
If you can synergize with institutions, do so, but don't sit around waiting for them to recognize or rescue you: they can offer you everything but initiative. This is the best path I've found for resisting the otherwise inevitable alienation from one's own creative labor that comes from permitting oneself and one's work to be processed by workshops and editors and tenure committees.
Written by Jennifer Mills on 26-02-2010, 3 user comments
I’m not buying it
I miss John Howard on Australia Day. That's what I thought this afternoon when I walked out of Eastside shops to see several teenage girls draped in Australian flags, off to some underage-drinking barbeque. Is that nationalism, kids? Do you seriously feel like part of a collective democratic project worth wearing around your neck? Or does it just go with the outfit?
At the risk of sounding like Grandma Marx, by crikey, why don't the young people rebel?
Because there's nothing to argue with when Australia and the flag have become brands. Rebelling against brands is a pointless exercise. Most brands targeted at the young already associate themselves with rebellion. To rebel, all you can do is associate yourself with a different brand - one of the wet-blanket, non-rebellious ones. But then you just look weak. If there is another option (like DIY? Find your new punk look in K-mart) it would take a strong teenager to go there. ... read more
Written by Jennifer Mills on 26-01-2010, 10 user comments
zines zines zines
not one but two articles up on new matilda about them. one is by me and t'other by the lovely vanessa berry.Written by Jennifer Mills on 29-12-2009, 2 user comments
goolwa or bust
The Australian Poetry Centre has a callout up for proposals for the Salt on the Tongue festival in Goolwa in April 2010. I heard great things about their 2008 festival in Castlemaine, so i'm definitely programming myself in for this one. Get your ideas in ASAP!
Lurking philanthropists, take note: there's also a polite request for donations. the 2009 festival had to be cancelled because feddo funding fell through, so the APC relies on you to make this happen.
Written by Jennifer Mills on 14-12-2009, 1 user comment
Steve Fielding is confused
no news there, but this is hilarious:Fielding likens same sex marriage to incest
Written by Jennifer Mills on 27-11-2009, 5 user comments
Archive closures – letter to Senator Ludwig
Dear Senator, I am very disappointed to hear that the National Archives will be closing their offices in Darwin, Adelaide, and Hobart over the next two years due to budget cuts. As an author I find this objectionable. The planned closures will make it harder for regional authors to research primary material. Will we have to fly to Canberra to conduct research? Because the NT was administered by the Commonwealth between 1910-1978 I understand the NAA also holds the records relating to the Stolen Generations. As well, the Adelaide office of NAA holds significant records relating to child migrants from the 1940s to 1960s – part of theWritten by Jennifer Mills on 19-11-2009, 1 user comment
critical gratitude
i have just posted my piece from the EWF reader over at walking and falling for your edification and amusement.
received said reader in the mail yesterday and have already laughed out loud, nodded serious assent, shaken my fist, copied a quote into my notebook, and read a paragraph aloud to the other person in the room. it's that sort of book.
Written by Jennifer Mills on 28-10-2009, No comments
postcard party
I have plugged this over at my blog already, but here's a reminder to Melbourne people to get down to Sticky tomorrow between 12-4pm for the launch of from sometimes love beth: an adventure in postcards, published by Affirm Press. There will be a mass postcard-sending, so take your address book!
more info here. Written by Jennifer Mills on 9-10-2009, 1 user comment
double-duh
just listening to the book show on RN - on the poetics of hiphop.
i love it when the academics catch on. 'wait up, you guys! i'm coming too, i just have to get my pencil case!'
what do people think of the rhyming=populist theory?
Written by Jennifer Mills on 6-10-2009, 10 user comments
i’m sorry to interrupt…
...the whirlwind of poetry joy, but i just had to crosspost this item.
in the murder capital of australia, it's still safe to be a racist:
NATIONAL, September 10, 2009: An Alice Springs resident has responded to the alleged bashing death of an Aboriginal man by five young white men by selling “Alice Springs White Power” t-shirts and caps from his car.
And it's all happening outside the Alice Springs Town Council offices, with local police and council officials refusing at least two requests by local residents to shut the man down.
The t-shirts and caps were yesterday on display in the passenger side window of a 4WD ute parked directly across the road from the council chambers. The number plates on the vehicle read 'GANGSTA', and a hand-written sign was taped to the back passenger window advertising the shirts and caps.
The sign included pricing - $25 for a shirt, $25 for a cap or to [sic] for $35. The shirt includes a Nazi swastika symbol, and the sign includes a mobile number, 0410 366 701.
Written by Jennifer Mills on 11-09-2009, 8 user comments
A quick word on the Alice Springs town camps
before i rush headlong back into my friday afternoon pile o' deadlines.
Macklin's office sent out a gleeful announcement of ALP success on Wednesday, saying they had agreement from 16 town camps to the houses-for-rights swap. The "win" was reported enthusiastically in the oz (sorry, that's 'the squalid, violent, overcrowded newspaper The Australian') and elsewhere. Hmm, seems to be premature, since there is a court injunction out against the deal.
"It emerged yesterday that the leases had not yet been signed." Emerged from no less a source than careful reading of the original press release. And they say journalism is dead. ... read more
Written by Jennifer Mills on 31-07-2009, No comments
pullback
what makes the green grass grow
'Soldiers, what makes the green grass grow?'
'Blood, blood, blood, Drill Sergeant!'
- popular US Army training chant before deployment to Iraq
cut grass, cut the
sentiment. but bug-eyed faces poke
glaring from between upended earth
dolls left buried by the kids that used to
live here but have since left buried
as some television ad for trouble elsewhere
poor kids hummed in a bloodless bubble
the boy who bucketed the dust before the café
is a facebust off an IED and
they will not haunt me, those nameless
traces in the marked earth, ploughed in
Written by Jennifer Mills on 1-07-2009, 2 user comments
US border control
Democracy Now is running a story on No More Deaths' Dan Millis, who was convicted of littering last year for leaving water out for Mexicans crossing illegally into the USA.
I spent a week with No More Deaths last year and wrote a piece about it for New Matilda. Good to see the issue's alive and well in the US, and disappointing to see nothing has changed on it since the election.
Isabel Garcia of Derechos Humanos says "I think the Obama administration is smart, competent and totally unaware of what’s going on along this border." Let's hope she's right, and they are made aware, though i suspect this swine flu business will be used as an excuse for further tightening. ... read more
Written by Jennifer Mills on 28-04-2009, No comments
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