Lionel Fogarty
Lionel Fogarty (born 1958) is an Indigenous Australian poet and political activist.
Life and career
He was born in 1958 at Barambah (now called Cherbourg Aboriginal Reserve) in Queensland, where he grew up.[1]
He has been involved in Aboriginal activism from his teenage years, mainly in Southern Queensland on issues such as Land Rights, Aboriginal health and deaths in custody. His brother, Daniel Yock died at the hands of police, in the back of a police van shortly after being arrested, in 1993.[2] His poetry, while in no way dismissible as simply 'political poetry', can be seen as an extension of these activities on another front. Common themes are the maintenance of traditional Aboriginal culture and the everyday realities of European occupation. Among the most 'experimental' of contemporary Australian poetry, his work has sometimes been described as 'surrealist'. Certainly large amounts of Indigenous Language, which white Australians sometimes find confronting, are employed but in part as an attempt to further dialogue between Australian cultures.
Fogarty has been involved with not-for-profit poetry organisation, The Red Room Company, participating in Unlocked, a program for inmates in New South Wales correctional centres, as well its creative projects including Clubs and Societies and The Poet's Life Works.[3]
Bibliography
- Yoogum Yoogum. (Penguin: Ringwood Vic., 1982)
- Ngutji illustrations by Lyn Briggs. (Spring Hill QLD: Murrie Coo-ee, 1984)
- New and Selected Poems, Munaldjali, Mutuerjaraera. (Melbourne: Hyland House, 1995)
- Minyung Woolah Binnung: What Saying Says. (Southport QLD: Keeaira Press, 2004)
- Dha'lan Djani Mitti: Collected Poems. (Cambridge: Salt, 2007?)
External
- Illustrated poems from What saying says
- Three poems at Jacket Magazine
- Lionel Fogarty biography and poems for The Red Room Company
References
- ↑ "Lionel Fogarty (1958 – )", Australian Poetry Library, archived from the original on 10 March 2015
- ↑ "Marchers pay a silent tribute to Daniel Yock. A peaceful 4000". The Canberra Times. 18 November 1993. p. 17.
- ↑ "Lionel Fogarty biography". The Red Room Company. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
- Lionel Fogarty at Australian Literature Resources
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