Angular shapes painted navy blue, yellow, pink and white intersect on a wooden board.

TEXT (Vol 29, No 1) April 2025 edition 

TEXT (Vol 29, No 1) includes scholarly contributors from Australia, New Zealand and the United States: Carrie Tiffany reflects on the mechanical intertext in relation to her award-winning novel Exploded View; Lilian Roberts explores Nachträglichkeit in poetic autobiography; Anders Villani contributes new thinking on trauma and poetics in Kate Lilley’s Tilt and his own collection, Totality; Patricia Webb discusses the inclusion of social justice themed texts in writing courses; Annabel Wilson reads for re-arrangement in Lynn Jenner’s Lost and Gone Away; Ruth Jackson writes on walking and travel writing in Ethiopia; Marija Pericic looks at sumazdat reading practices within the Soviet Union (USSR); Shelley-Anne Smith considers emotional contagion and embodied empathy in literary posthumanism; and Soren Tai Smith writes on self-shedding and decreativity in Kafka and Weil.

This issue also includes prose and poetry by Caitlyn Stone, Jacqueline Exbroyat (trans. Patricia Worth), Brid-Áine Parnell, Ian C. Smith, David Thomas Henrey Wright, Nat Kassel, Inez Baranay, Yuxin Zhao, Rebekah Clarkson, Shady Cosgrove, Gay Lynch, Julia Prendergast, Billie Travalini, Cassandra Atherton, Dominique Hecq, Jen Webb, Katrina Finlayson, Eugen Bacon, Paul Hetherington, Owen Bullock, Jessie Seymour, Martin Langford, Annabel Wilson, Verity Oswin, Beth Spencer, Ella Jeffrey, and Les Wicks.

And in our reviews section, Samuel J. Cox reviews Contemporary Preoccupations in the Australian Novel by Nicholas Burns and Louise Klee (eds.), Tarla Klamer reviews Leaf by Anne Elvey & Ways to Say Goodbye by Anne Kellas, Andrew Leggett reivews Annihilation by Michel Houellebecq, Philip Harvey reviews Lands of Likeness & Dark-Land by Kevin Hart, Jake Sandtner reviews Juice by Tim Winton, Jodi Vial reviews Flight by Shady Cosgrove, Colin Dray reviews A to Z of Creative Writing Methods by Deborah Wardle et al. (eds.), Amanda Tink reviews Raging Grace by Andy Jackson, Esther Ottoway and Kerri Shying (eds.), Denise Beckton reviews Thinning by Inga Simpson & Something About Alaska by JA Cooper, Moya Costello reviews The Season by Helen Garner, Carolyn Booth reviews Images of Water by Eugen Bacon (ed.), Jen Webb reviews Mishearing by David Musgrave and we publish a letter to the editors from James Shea and Grant Caldwell in response to Owen Bullock’s review of The Routledge Global Haiku Reader (TEXT Vol 28, No 2).

Read this and other issues via the TEXT website here

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About Sarah Giles

Sarah Giles (she/her) is a PhD candidate at Swinburne University researching the possibilities of the contemporary short story cycle exploring women’s experiences of isolation, trauma and mental illness. Her writing has been published in The Writing Mind: Creative Writing Responses to Images of the Living Brain, ACE III and ACE IV (Arresting Contemporary stories by Emerging Writers), The Incompleteness Book, TEXT Journal among others. Sarah works at Writers Victoria as Marketing and Memberships Officer and is a sessional tutor across multiple universities.