246 Autumn 2022 Buy this issue New essays and fiction from Jeff Sparrow, Ouyang Yu, Elena Gomez and Greg Page, plus the winners of the Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize 2021 and the Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021. Issue Contents Features 'That's what drives us to fight': labour, wilderness and the environment in Australia Jeff Sparrow Reading Interruptions: a review of Roe and Muecke Dashiell Moore Coal flower aesthetics Elena Gomez Fiction New face in the fight against poverty Andy McQuestin Home sweet slaughterhouse Greg Page Editorial Editorial Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk Short Story Prize Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Runner-Up, Bite the Hand Mikee Donato Sto Domingo Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Runner-Up, New directions in anthropomorphism Miriam Webster Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Winner, the labeller Saraid Taylor Poetry Prize Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021 Third Place, stones Lily Rupcic Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021, the national debt Gareth Morgan Poetry | Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021 winner, are you ready poem Ender Başkan Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021, Judges Report Toby Fitch, Keri Glastonbury and Grace Yee Browse the issue: Features Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Climate politics 'That's what drives us to fight': labour, wilderness and the environment in Australia Jeff Sparrow In 1838, the Sydney Herald dismissed arguments about prior Indigenous possession of the place now known as Australia. In its response to Aboriginal claims, the editorial argued that ‘[t]his vast country was to [Indigenous people] a common—they bestowed no labor upon the land—their ownership, their right, was nothing more than that of the Emu or the Kangaroo.’ The editorial expressed the philosophical underpinning of terra nullius: that, as John Locke says, land becomes property only when man ‘improve[s] it for the benefit of Life, and therein lay[s] out something upon it that was his own, his labour’. Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Poetry Reading Interruptions: a review of Roe and Muecke Dashiell Moore There is a Bugarrigarra story from north-west Australia about spirit children, the rayi, who emerge from the water to create future children in the minds of dreamers. Among other things, the story suggests that rights and obligations can be inherited as well as bestowed. The story is significant to Paddy Roe, a Nyigina man from Broome in Western Australia, whose authority and custodianship is linked to a vision of a pregnant stingray he experienced with his wife, Mary Pikalli. In part, the vision conveyed the future coming of children in his family. Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Poetry Coal flower aesthetics Elena Gomez Amid the repercussions of decades of ecological disaster invented or intensified by capitalist development and a historical rift between red and green movements in the West, Marxist ecology, emerging in the late nineties and early 2000s, recuperates Marx’s writing into ecological materialism, which can inform otherwise typically apolitical or liberal solutions to our concurrent climate catastrophes. It is from this standpoint that a Marxist intervention into ecopoetics can be articulated. Fiction Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Fiction New face in the fight against poverty Andy McQuestin Several things happen. I wake up. I hear the appeal of the advertising cruisers creeping past my building. My skin flames where it rubbed against the grainy sheets. Still two more days before I can do a load of washing. My Palm lights up with messages from work, Mum and (surprise, surprise) no men. And my mind remembers too late my affirmation principles: today is a good day. I am good. I am today. And all that. But I feel like death, or worse, like life gone on too long. Mornings like this, with the abrupt awakenings and the too-late affirmations, I fall into a mood made up of a single thought: is this all the apartment my hard work can afford? Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Fiction Home sweet slaughterhouse Greg Page It was the machine attached to someone’s arm that woke me up. That type of machine on wheels they use to monitor blood pressure, take your pulse, drip meds into you. It was beeping loudly. They always seem to. I became aware of feeling cold. Hospital cold. I was lying on my back. I felt like I was perfectly straight. I pulled the covers up to my neck. I nestled into the warmth of the bed as best I could but I still could feel the cold all around the room above me. I kept very still. What else was there to do? Editorial Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Editorial Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk In July critics and teachers of Australian literature met in Nipaluna/Hobart to commemorate the thirty-year anniversary of the Mabo decision, and to trace its various afterlives in the novels, films, and poems of the settler-colony. Keynotes and papers contemplating the changing aesthetics and politics of Australian writing were punctuated by austere reminders of the decimation of an already exclusionary humanities sector. Short Story Prize Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Prizes Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Runner-Up, Bite the Hand Mikee Donato Sto Domingo Martha How is the Pacific in the evening? Wobbly like a drunk or a toddler. In the lounge of the Diana Star, the passengers are singing karaoke in the dark. On a wall is an enormous projection of words, in blue font bordered with white, marching against a backdrop of phantoms. Nowadays, all karaoke videos […] Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Prizes Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Runner-Up, New directions in anthropomorphism Miriam Webster Animal voices are annoying, says my writer friend, spinning her spoon on the table. We have met over coffee to discuss writing, something we do periodically though I have no innate sense of direction and am always late to our meetings. We speak hurriedly in a café west of the city, rain falling against the glass eleven days after it started, La Nina having been declared for the second year in a row. The month is November. Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Prizes Neilma Sidney Short Story Prize Winner, the labeller Saraid Taylor I am in a world of women and they are everything. That is why I carry the labeller with me, so I can allocate each woman to their rightful place. It is a secret thing, the labeller, small enough to hide in the palm of my hand or tuck into the front flap of a basketball bag. It prints little tags of invisible plastic that adhere neatly to the forehead. Sometimes, after I have slept with someone, and they already have a forehead label, I glue the new classification over their breasts while they sleep. Other times, I just stick over it. The label is soft in its rigidity. Poetry Prize Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Judith Wright Poetry Prize Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021 Third Place, stones Lily Rupcic he asks to see each pill I take, a catalogue blue|green and yellow|pink|tangerine each one a promise, a spell: make my mother well we lie on my bed and watch the birds, eyes leaf-green somewhere between autumn and spring Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Poetry Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021, the national debt Gareth Morgan ok, let’s get rid of everything. let’s just have, i just, i just want plumbing, art a steady stream a community and Lucy and i suppose modern medicine…… and a big mac and a decent rosé i want death to all Apps except clock and notes and voice […] Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Poetry Poetry | Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021 winner, are you ready poem Ender Başkan 1911 / governor of istanbul orders stray dogs to be rounded up and exiled to the island of sivriada / hunger and thirst / they eat one another / 80,000 dogs perish / some drown at sea trying to escape / a severe earthquake follows / a punishment from god / the island is now aka hayırsızada / the inauspicious island / 2022 / now the accountant tells me hes reading moby dick / tells me i should try to increase my income this year / tells me it hasnt quite grabbed him yet but his son loves it / Published in Overland Issue 246 Autumn 2022 · Judith Wright Poetry Prize Judith Wright Poetry Prize 2021, Judges Report Toby Fitch, Keri Glastonbury and Grace Yee From a field of many hundreds and a remarkable shortlist of nine poems, the judges of the Overland Judith Wright Poetry Prize for New and Emerging Poets 2021—Keri Glastonbury, Grace Yee and Toby Fitch—have selected these three poems as the winners Previous Issue 245 Summer 2021 Next Issue 247 Winter 2022