1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910820963803321

Autore

McGregor Fiona <1965->

Titolo

Buried not dead : essays / / Fiona McGregor

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Australia : , : Giramondo Publishing Company, , [2021]

©2021

ISBN

1-925818-62-4

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (145 pages)

Disciplina

824.3

Soggetti

Australian essays

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Dedication -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Incantations -- Where Your Cabaret Comes From -- Dear Malcolm -- Manifestations -- Looking for Lanny K -- Last Remaining Relative -- The Experience Machine -- Buried Not Dead -- Ocean of Country -- Fabricated Realities -- Not the Story of a Tattooed Girl -- Wicked Women and Whipped Cream -- The Hot Desk -- Crooks and Shadows -- Finales -- Fortress Mardi Gras -- Eleven Lives -- Surro -- Acknowledgements.

Sommario/riassunto

Novelist Fiona McGregor'snew book, Buried Not Dead, is a collection of essays on art, literature and performance, sexuality, activism and the life of the city. It features performance artists, writers, dancers, tattooists and DJs, some of them famous, like Marina Abramovic and Mike Parr, while others, like Latai Taumoepeau, Lanny K and Kathleen Mary Fallon, are important figures but less well known. In her portraits of these performers and artists and the scenes they inhabit, McGregor creates an intimate and expansive archive of a kind rarely recorded in our histories. Fiona McGregor has a deep and enduring involvement in the worlds she represents. She came of age as an artist during an outpouring of performative queer creativity, in a community that celebrated subversion, dissent and uninhibited partygoing, and in her writing she observes the shift from that moment to new forms of cultural repression. McGregor is a participant in her essays as well as a witness -- she sees through an artist's eyes and records what she



perceives with a novelist's insight. In excavating the lives of others, she reveals her own, and shows the possibilities that exist beneath the surface of our culture.