My Tongue is My Own: A Life of Gwen Harwood

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title My Tongue is My Own: A Life of Gwen Harwood
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Ann-Marie Priest
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:416
Dimensions(mm): Height 233,Width 154
Category/GenreMemoirs
ISBN/Barcode 9781760642341
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Black Inc.
Imprint La Trobe University Press
Publication Date 3 May 2022
Publication Country Australia

Description

A masterful portrait of a major Australian writer, her incandescent poetry and her battles to be heard in a male-dominated literary establishment. The first biography of Gwen Harwood (1920-1995), one of Australia's most significant and distinctive poets. Harwood is renowned for her brilliance, but loved for her humour, rebellion and mischief. A public figure by the end of her life, she was always deeply protective of her privacy, and even now, some twenty-six years after her death, little is known of the experiences that gave rise to her extraordinary poems. This book follows Harwood from her childhood in 1920s Brisbane to her final years in Hobart in the 1990s. It traces how a lively, sardonic and determined young woman built a career in the conservative 1950s, blasting her way into the patriarchal strongholds of Australian poetry. Harwood refused to be bound by convention, 'liberating' herself, to use her word, before women's lib existed. Yet she also struggled for much of her life to combine marriage and motherhood with her creative ambitions. In this sense, she is a twentieth-century everywoman. She is also a unique and powerful presence in Australian literary history, a poet who challenged orthodoxies and spoke in a remarkable range of voices. This illuminating, moving biography reveals a deeply passionate figure both at odds with her time and deeply of it, and reclaims and celebrates this important Australian writer.

Author Biography

Ann-Marie Priest is the author of A Free Flame- Australian Women Writers; Vocation in the Twentieth Century, which was shortlisted for the 2016 Dorothy Hewett Award; and Great Writers, Great Loves. She works as a senior lecturer at Central Queensland University.