Marcella Polain
Marcella Polain (born 1958) is an Australian-resident poet, novelist and short fiction writer.
Early life
Marcella Polain was born in Singapore and with her family migrated to Australia at the age of two with her Irish father and Armenian mother. She began writing as a child.
Education
Polain studied Literature and Creative Arts at Western Australian Institute of Technology (now Curtin University). In 1981 she attended the Australian Film, Television and Radio School in Sydney. At Western Australian Secondary Teachers' College (now Edith Cowan University), she took a Post Graduate Diploma in Secondary Education. Polain completed a PhD at the University of Western Australia in 2006.
Career
Polain entered the Perth poetry scene in the early 1990s. She was awarded grants by the Department for Culture and the Arts and was a founding member (along with Morgan Yasbincek, Julia Lawrinson, Tracy Ryan and Sarah French) of Perth's WEB women's readings, which brought guests such as Dorothy Porter and Gig Ryan to Perth. She has been poetry editor for the literary magazines Westerly and Blue Dog (now folded). She tutored in Writing for 10 years at Murdoch University before becoming Senior Lecturer at Edith Cowan University in 2004. Her first novel, The Edge of the World won the University of Western Australia's Higher Degree by Research Prize for Publications. A revised version of her PhD's critical essay "The Stubborn Murmur" was long-listed for the 2010 Calibre Essay Prize. The Edge of the World was also nominated for the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize Regional best first book award. In 2013, Polain was an invited poet at the inaugural International Poetry Festival in Armenia. Her poetry has been published there and in India, Romania and the USA. In 2010-2011 she was a recipient of an Australia Council Grant for New Work of Fiction. In 2012, she co-founded (at Edith Cowan University and with visual artist Dr Paul Uhlmann) the micropress 'fold editions'. She also worked with Mace Francis (composer) and Jo Pollitt and Paea Leach (dancer-choreographers) on the interdisciplinary production 'Quiet Beast'. In April 2015, the Armenian translation of The Edge of the World was launched in Armenia as part of the Literary Ark Writers' Festival in Yerevan and the Centenary Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. Also in 2015, she attended the 19th International poetry festival Poetry Nights at Curtea de arges, Romania. A Romanian-English edition of her selected poetry was launched there and she was awarded the 2015 International Grand Prize for Poetry by the Academia Orient Occident. [1]
Books
Poetry
- Dumbstruck (1996) Wollongong: Five Islands Press
- Each Clear Night (2000) Wollongong: Five Islands Press
- Therapy Like Fish: new and selected poems (2008) Melbourne: John Leonard Press
Novels
- The Edge of the World (2007)Fremantle: Fremantle Press
- La marginea lumii (The Edge of the World) (2012) Romanian translation by Sergiu Selian. Bucharest: Ararat
- Armenian translation of The Edge of the World, translated by Aram Arsenyan, edited by Aram Arkun, Yerevan: Apollon
Short fiction
- "Skin" in "Westerly" Dec 2005
- "Sleep without Cameras" in "Westerly" Dec 2010
- "Beautiful Negatives" in "The Kid on the Karaoke Stage and other stories" ed Georgia Richter. (2011) Fremantle: Fremantle Press
- "A Calf is an Animal" in "Westerly" Dec 2012
- "Curtain Man" in "Antithesis", 2013
Honours and Awards
- Anne Elder Prize for "Dumbstruck" 1996
- Short-listing of "Each Clear Night" WA Premiers Poetry Award 2000
- Patricia Hackett Prize for "Skins" in Westerly 2005
- University of Western Australia's Creative Works Publication Prize 2007
- Shortlisting of "The Edge of the World" for the Commonwealth Writers Prize for First Book 2007
- Short-listing of "Therapy like Fish: new and selected poems" ACT Judith Wright Prize 2008
- Patricia Hackett Prize for "Sleep without Cameras" Westerly Dec 2010
- Long listing of "The Stubborn Murmur: The Armenian Genocide and After" in the Calibre Essay Prize 2010
- Australia Council Grant for Established Writers, New Work, Fiction, 2010–2011
- International Grand Prize for Poetry, Academia Orient-Occident, Romania, 2015
References
External links
- Profile at Fremantle Press
- Interview at PerthWoman.com.au
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