238 Autumn 2020 Buy this issue Radical: Toby Fitch on Sean Bonney, Dujuan Hoosan on Aboriginal history, Elena Gomez on poetics, Micaela Sahhar on Palestine, winners of the Judith Wright Poetry Prize and the Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize. Issue Contents Features Parallel dimensional man Omer Wissman Practical epiphanies Joshua Mostafa Striking back to stop the war on our planet Padraic Gibson On radical love Clelia O Rodríguez Welcome to the Nakba: notes from the epicentre of an apocalypse Micaela Sahhar Aboriginal people were here first Dujuan Hoosan Critique this Justin Clemens Looming poetics Elena Gomez Our Death: Aspects of the radical in Sean Bonney’s last book of poems Toby Fitch and Sean Bonney Fiction Urban gods Cherry Zheng Pinches Emily Barber Mermaid Gareth Hipwell Creek jumping Cade Turner-Mann Poetry Poetry | Ode to the defenceless: from hypotaxis to parataxis John Kinsella Editorial Introducing Overland 238 Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk Short Story Prize Westernport Crossing | Neilma Sidney Prize, runner-up Elisabeth Passmore The postcard from nowheresville | Neilma Sidney Prize, runner-up Alan Sincic The Houseguest | Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Jenah Shaw Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Judges' Notes Joshua Mostafa, Margo Lanagan and Hannah Kent Poetry Prize chinny chin chin Grace Yee No language for white man Lou Garcia-Dolnik No alarms Dan Hogan Judith Wright Poetry Prize Judges Notes Michael Farrell, Toby Fitch and Ellen van Neerven Browse the issue: Features Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Philosophy Parallel dimensional man Omer Wissman As though from the belly of the old lady who swallowed an ouroboros come carrier pigeons defecating messages on the city walls about how automagically the world is filled with machinism, a reborn unknown third nature habitat of fright or flight of fancy. There at the gates of this netropolis stands the prophet like a global Potemkin village fool, crying the wolf is in nude clothing. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Art Practical epiphanies Joshua Mostafa 1. A wealthy and worldly socialite, financier turned jaded art dealer, resigned to holding life at a certain ironic distance, encounters for the first time a piece of music that – in his emotional response to its phrasing and harmonies – holds out the promise of recovering authentic enthusiasm. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Climate emergency Striking back to stop the war on our planet Padraic Gibson On New Year’s Day 2020, the Navy ship HMAS Choules left Sydney Harbour for a rescue mission to Mallacoota. Images of families huddled on the beach on this Victorian coastal town, as a firestorm closed in, became emblematic of the sense of existential crisis that gripped much of Australia. Long suffered by people at the margins, the climate crisis arrived in terrifying ways for the Australian mainstream. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Love On radical love Clelia O Rodríguez In sacred lands, stories experience growth in the memories of untamed love. It is a world revolving around a core made up of unexplainable metaphors. Wrapping themselves within the reasoning of the subjective mode. Togetherness tied in a dreamt notion of freedom written nowhere. In the merge into the intention of listening. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Solidarity Welcome to the Nakba: notes from the epicentre of an apocalypse Micaela Sahhar Smoke haze hangs over Melbourne. The rim of my car-door is caked in orange dust after red rains. People post shots of the compromised view from their windows and balconies, visibility updates, rain water tank statuses: water like sweet sticky soft drinks left out on a hot summer’s day. I do not rejoice in these recent months of bushfires. But I am pleased that their traces have arrived in our capitals. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Racism Aboriginal people were here first Dujuan Hoosan The rainbow serpent comes through here on the dry land, and made the creeks, the rivers and waterholes. That’s why on white mans maps rivers look like snake tracks. The serpent made the water run really really really deep and fit himself in it. That became the waterholes around Alice Springs. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Criticism Critique this Justin Clemens I don’t know. Perhaps critique — let alone ‘radical critique’ — is today finished as a viable modality of action, whether private or public, moral or political. The word critique enters English from the French in the late 16th century, although its fortunes really take off in the eighteenth century, where it is bound to the upsurge of quote-unquote ‘Enlightenment,’ with all of the ambiguities accompanying that complex phenomenon and its crises, critics, criticisms, criticising and criteria. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Poetry Looming poetics Elena Gomez Marxist-feminist poetics, I have argued elsewhere, requires a preoccupation with social reproduction – as a theme and as an object of inquiry and critique – while at the same time being invested in the temporalities of women’s work. Time itself has been shaped by capitalism in relation to how we work and live. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Poetry Our Death: Aspects of the radical in Sean Bonney’s last book of poems Toby Fitch and Sean Bonney Sean Bonney (1969-2019) died in November. He was a British anti-fascist activist, revolutionary socialist and poet who was born in Brighton and raised in the north of England. He lived in London, and, from 2015 until his death, in Berlin. He was married to poet Frances Kruk. His last book of poems, Our Death, was […] Fiction Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Fiction Urban gods Cherry Zheng The war between the gods of the city ended on a sweltering Tuesday afternoon, when Duke Denver impaled the old patriarch Black Fern with a sharpened lamppost in the middle of a busy intersection. The traffic backed up for twenty-two kilometres, and in the following hours, dozens of drivers and passengers were hospitalised for heatstroke. Hundreds of bats fell out of the trees, their small bodies littering the pavements. Half the city succumbed to the blackout. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Fiction Pinches Emily Barber ‘I can’t snorkel to save myself,’ you say, wriggling into your bathers. Rudi tugs on board shorts. ‘You’ll be fine. You’ll love it.’ He smears on sunscreen and steers you out of the pandan-thatched bungalow. Past your plunge pool, under the frangipani, through gardens giddy with crotons. At the villa gate you mount rusty bicycles. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Fiction Mermaid Gareth Hipwell Late one Friday night in the year I left university, I woke on a strange and distant railway platform, lying face-down in a puddle of my own yeasty vomit – half-chewed chunks of pineapple strung in my hair – and resolved never to regret another choice. Since then, I have applied myself assiduously to leading a blame-free life, fearing guilt, and retreating from any situation that might lend itself to my own embarrassment or shame. Time and again, I have been reassured that regret is little more than the destructive byproduct of an inconstant mind. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Fiction Creek jumping Cade Turner-Mann The creek runs fast down the steep, forested hills that pass for mountains, clumps up into waterholes across the plains where sheep line the banks, and continues on through the bush towards the sea. On the town’s naming day the community gathers behind the hall to grill their black wattle-seed sausages over rusted barbecue plates, the younger children kick footballs that lodge themselves in the high forks of scribbly-gums, and the rest join the throng of revellers down by the creek where an ancient log, nearly petrified, hangs across the water suspended on forked plinths. Poetry Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Resistance Poetry | Ode to the defenceless: from hypotaxis to parataxis John Kinsella poem to the v-c and university as a whole: a ‘position paper’ for discussion 1. The killers who think they’re life-givers surround themselves with people who will praise them – there are dead trees to climb, crows’ nests to be made, drones to fly, rebuilding the unmaking in own images Editorial Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Introducing Overland 238 Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk Resistance is the tenor of reality, and action in it is compromised, bloody-handed, in the world and of it. In some senses it can seem that an ever-larger stake of leftist discourse is consumed by a miserabilist scramble for seniority on a narrowing mesa of unhistorical piety. In the crisis of social, ethical, and ecological collapse that greets us daily, clean hands look more than ever like magical thinking. Short Story Prize Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Westernport Crossing | Neilma Sidney Prize, runner-up Elisabeth Passmore When school was done and the hall swept and mopped, when we’d taken Mrs Hamilton’s scraps to the chooks and polished our shoes, as the days lengthened into November we were allowed to run out on the mudflats. We’d play cricket in the cold breeze, if Mr Baye would unlock the bat and ball, and dig for pipis for Mrs Hamilton, who said they improved her soups. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · The postcard from nowheresville | Neilma Sidney Prize, runner-up Alan Sincic We shoulda known it. Barnett and that bank shot of his. The Piney Vista Drive-In’s what he called it, a wonderment of entertainment technology ginned up out of – typical Barnett fashion – nothing. “Spiney vision?” said Lynch. “Piney Vista,” said Barnett. He looked like he’d slept in his clothes. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Fiction The Houseguest | Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Jenah Shaw The questions should be explicit, things like when and how long for and where in the house will an extra person sleep. Then there is the issue of payment: whether there is any, to start, and then if so how much and if not money for board then perhaps for food or power or Netflix, or will the houseguest be expected to help instead with other matters – the cleaning of rooms, the caring of children, the contributing to family life in some other, less tangible way. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Neilma Sidney Prize Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Judges' Notes Joshua Mostafa, Margo Lanagan and Hannah Kent Winner: Jenah Shaw | The houseguest For such a formally inventive story – a mosaic of descriptive and narrative passages of varying lengths and degrees of evocativeness, ‘sorted’ under subject headings – it’s remarkable that ‘The houseguest’ feels so warmly humane and is such fun to read. The narration has an intriguingly hypothetical tone and […] Poetry Prize Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Poetry chinny chin chin Grace Yee when the black curtain drops in a back room at the airport. solo desk in the corner: union jack + southern cross + lipstick holder. white man drags a beat up fairlane, parks so close our mirrors touch. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Poetry No language for white man Lou Garcia-Dolnik The young sit eir fresia in bottom yard where it bloom best. Feline in mangifera where e move best. So much living in pastime, riverbank where kindred set it down best. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Poetry No alarms Dan Hogan Give the brigalows time to impersonate metal. Fold the final reminders like bed sheets. Ignore the echoes. Are you revolted the right way? Mosquito into the tidiest corruptions. Zap. Soak the stains. Ear against the wall, diagnose water hammer. Published in Overland Issue 238 Autumn 2020 · Judith Wright Poetry Prize Judith Wright Poetry Prize Judges Notes Michael Farrell, Toby Fitch and Ellen van Neerven ‘No Alarms’ could be said to have a strong tentativeness: in tending towards a prose poem, but not becoming one, in tending toward cutup, but resisting the difficulty of that for its own difficulty (of writing this good poem). ‘No Alarms’, despite its multi-directionality, finds clearings in the mind. Its strong sense of style helps, […] Previous Issue 237.5 Autumn Fiction Next Issue 239 Winter 2020