Stuart Barnes (poet)

Stuart Barnes (born 1977) is an Australian poet.

Stuart Barnes
Born
Alma materMonash University
Notable workGlasshouses
Awards2021/22 Gwen Harwood Poetry Prize
2015 Arts Queensland Thomas Shapcott Poetry Prize
Websitewww.stuartabarnes.com

Biography

Barnes was born in Hobart, Tasmania, and educated at Monash University, Victoria. His first book, Glasshouses, was awarded the 2015 Arts Queensland Thomas Shapcott Poetry Prize.[1] The judges of the Anne Elder Award, for which the collection was commended, wrote: "Barnes is compelling, dramatic and imaginative. ... [He] is a major poet in the making; watch this space!".[2] In The Sydney Morning Herald, Jane Sullivan included Glasshouses in 'Books for the year: The treats in store from Australia and overseas in 2016'.[3] The collection has been warmly received by critics: in The West Australian, William Yeoman described it as "playful, subtle, moving, witty and outrageous—a major achievement";[4] in The Australian, Geoff Page noted its "impressive balancing act between a love of precursors and the strategies of the avant-garde".[5]

In his conference paper 'Sonnets and Para-Sonnets', Stephen Guy-Bray, Professor, Department of English, University of British Columbia, said: "Barnes's poems are often created out of other poems, whether literally—as in the case of the five centos he includes [in Glasshouses]—or more metaphorically, as in his use of sonnet form and of quotations. In Glasshouses the sonnet is only one form among many that Barnes plays with, just as the lines of other people’s poetry that make up all of the centos are only one kind of quotation among the many others—conversation, texts, brand names, place names—that fill the book. In blurring the lines between sexual and poetic activity, Barnes sets up a consolation for the lack of sexual success that [his sonnet '10:15 Saturday Night'] recounts, a consolation that is arguably implicit in almost all the sonnet sequences ever written, and certainly in the most famous ones. By the end of the poem the poet Barnes most resembles is perhaps not Shakespeare or any of the other sonneteers of the sixteenth century but rather (to me, at least) Hart Crane."[6]

Barnes's poetry has been widely published in anthologies and journals, including in The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry,[7] Cordite Poetry Review,[8] The Language in My Tongue: An Anthology of Australian and New Zealand Poetry,[9] The Montreal International Poetry Prize Anthology 2020,[10] The Moth,[11] Overland,[12] Poetry,[13] Poetry Wales[14] and Southerly,[15]. Other writing, as selected by Nick Earls, has been published to goa, Brisbane’s broadcast roadside digital billboard network, as part of Queensland Writers Centre's #8WordStory initiative.[16]

Barnes has been a judge for the 2014 ACT Writing and Publishing Awards: Poetry Book Category,[17] the 2017 Arts Queensland Val Vallis Award,[18] the 2021 Red Room Poetry Fellowship[19] and the 2022 Arts Queensland Thomas Shapcott Poetry Prize.[20] From 2017–2019 he was a program adviser for Queensland Poetry Festival.[21] From 2014 to 2015 he was poetry editor of Verity La,[22] and from 2013 to 2017 he was poetry editor of Tincture Journal.[23] In 2018 he served on the advisory board of Bent Window Books and guest-edited, with Quinn Eades, Cordite Poetry Review Issue 88: TRANSQUEER.[24] In 2020 he guest-edited, with Charmaine Papertalk Green, Rabbit: a journal for nonfiction poetry Issue 32: FORM. In 2021 he guest-edited, with Claire Gaskin, Australian Poetry Journal 11.1 'local, attention'.[25]

Bibliography

Poetry collections

  • Like to the Lark (Upswell Publishing, 2023, ISBN 978-0-6455-3698-0).[26]

Anthologies (as contributor)

  • Admissions: Voices within Mental Health. Eds David Stavanger, Radhiah Chowdhury, Mohammad Awad. (Upswell Publishing, 2022).[28]
  • Alcatraz. Eds Cassandra Atherton and Paul Hetherington. (Gazebo Books, 2022).[29]
  • The Language in My Tongue: An Anthology of Australian and New Zealand Poetry. Eds Cassandra Atherton and Paul Hetherington. (MadHat Press, 2022).[30]
  • Travel: an anthology of microlit. Ed. Cassandra Atherton. (Spineless Wonders, 2022).[31]
  • Resilience: 2021 ACU Prize for Poetry Anthology. Eds Robert H. F. Carver and Margot Hillel. (Australian Catholic University, 2021).[32]
  • Memory Book: Portraits of Older Australians in Poetry and Watercolours. Eds Jessica L Wilkinson and Cassandra Atherton. (Hunter Publishers, 2021).[33]
  • The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry. Eds Cassandra Atherton and Paul Hetherington. (Melbourne University Press, 2020).[34]
  • Pulped Fiction: an anthology of microlit. Ed. Cassandra Atherton. (Spineless Wonders, 2021).[35]
  • The Montreal International Poetry Prize Anthology 2020. Eds Eli MacLaren et al. (Vehicule Press).[36]
  • Scars: an anthology of microlit. Ed. Cassandra Atherton. (Spineless Wonders, 2020).[37]
  • Lovejets: Queer Male Poets on 200 Years of Walt Whitman. Ed. Raymond Luczak. (Squares & Rebels, 2019).
  • Going Postal: More than 'Yes' or 'No'. Eds Quinn Eades and Son Vivienne. (Brow Books, 2018).[38]
  • Shaping the Fractured Self: poetry of chronic illness and pain. Ed. Heather Taylor Johnson. (UWA Publishing, 2017).[39]
  • States of Poetry Queensland - Series One. Ed. Felicity Plunkett. (Australian Book Review, 2016).[40]
  • fourW: new writing. Ed. David Gilbey. (fourW press, 2012, 2013, 2014).
  • Time with the sky : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2010. Eds Jill Jones and Anthony Lawrence. (Hunter Writers' Centre, 2010).[41]
  • The Night Road : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2009. Eds Jill Jones and Philip Salom. (Hunter Writers' Centre, 2009).[42]

Awards and nominations

References

  1. "Barnes wins 2015 Thomas Shapcott Prize". Books and Publishing. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  2. Anne Elder Award Judges' report
  3. "Books for the year: The treats in store from Australia and overseas in 2016". 24 December 2015.
  4. Poetic play and politics
  5. Australian poetry: Bruce Dawe, Barnes, Jaireth, McCooey
  6. Sonnets and Para-Sonnets: Stephen Guy-Bray on Stuart Barnes's Glasshouses and Lyn Hejinian's The Unfollowing
  7. The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry, MUP
  8. Stuart Barnes at Cordite Poetry Review
  9. The Language in My Tongue: An Anthology of Australian and New Zealand Poetry, MadHat Press
  10. The Montreal Poetry Prize Anthology 2020, Vehicule Press
  11. The Moth Issue 42
  12. Stuart Barnes at Overland
  13. Stuart Barnes in POETRY (Chicago)
  14. Poetry Wales 57.1
  15. 'Double Acrostic' by Stuart Barnes
  16. Beautiful 8 Word Stories Are Cropping Up On Queensland Billboards
  17. Winners of the 2014 ACT Writing and Publishing Awards
  18. Winners for the Val Vallis Award for an Unpublished Poem 2017
  19. 2021 Red Room Poetry Fellowship, Fellow's Statement and Judging Notes
  20. 2022 Thomas Shapcott Prize Awardee and Judges' comments
  21. Queensland Poetry Festival Program Advisers
  22. Poems from Glasshouses: Stuart Barnes/Leigh Backhouse
  23. Stuart Barnes, interviewed by Daniel Young
  24. Cordite Poetry Review, Stuart Barnes, Quinn Eades, Miss Saffaa, TRANSQUEER
  25. Australian Poetry Journal, Stuart Barnes, Claire Gaskin
  26. Like to the Lark, Upswell Publishing
  27. Glasshouses, University of Queensland Press
  28. Admissions: Voices within Mental Health, Upswell Publishing
  29. Alcatraz, Gazebo Books
  30. MadHat Press, The Language in My Tongue: An Anthology of Australian and New Zealand Poetry
  31. Spineless Wonders, Travel anthology
  32. Resilience: 2021 ACU Prize for Poetry Anthology, ACU
  33. Memory Book: Portraits of Older Australians in Poetry and Watercolours, Hunter Publishers
  34. The Anthology of Australian Prose Poetry, MUP
  35. Spineless Wonders, Pulped Fiction anthology
  36. The Montreal International Poetry Prize Anthology 2020, Vehicule Press
  37. Spineless Wonders, Scars anthology
  38. Going Postal: More than 'Yes' or 'No', Brow Books
  39. Shaping the Fractured Self: poetry of chronic illness and pain, UWA Publishing
  40. States of Poetry Queensland - Series One
  41. Time with the sky : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2010, Hunter Writers' Centre
  42. The Night Road : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2009, Hunter Writers' Centre
  43. "Gwen Harwood Poetry Prize winners: 2021/22". Island Magazine. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  44. Travel: an anthology of microlit, Spineless Wonders
  45. Resilience: 2021 ACU Prize for Poetry Anthology, ACU
  46. Pushcart Prize 2020 Nominations
  47. Read the 2020 shortlist and winning poem
  48. Scars: an anthology of microlit, Spineless Wonders
  49. "The 2017 Venie Prize Winners", News, 10 August 2017.
  50. Mary Gilmore Award 2017 shortlist announced
  51. Anne Elder Award Judges' report
  52. Time with the sky : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2010, National Library of Australia
  53. The Night Road : Newcastle Poetry Prize Anthology 2009, National Library of Australia
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