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Ali Cobby Eckermann (born 1963) is an Australian poet of Aboriginal Australian ancestry. She is a Yankunytjatjara woman born on Kaurna land in South Australia . Eckermann has written poetry collections, verse novels and a memoir, and has been shortlisted for or won several literary awards.
The 2016 festival saw the emergence of a strong commitment to including more diverse and Indigenous voices including the creation of the Indigenous Poet in Residence (Sam Wagan Watson 2016 and Ali Cobby Eckermann 2017) [7] and the inaugural Oodgeroo Noonuccal Indigenous Poetry Prize. Queensland Poetry maintains its commitment to supporting ...
Ali Cobby Eckermann (born 1963) Robbie Coburn (born 1994) Hal Colebatch (born 1945–2019) Aidan Coleman (born 1976) Laurence Collinson (1925–1986) Anna Couani (born 1948) Robert Crawford (1868–1930) Louise Crisp (born 1957) Julian Croft (born 1941) Alison Croggon (born 1962) M. T. C. Cronin (born 1963) Zora Cross (1890–1964) Margaret ...
Craig Shaw Gardner wrote a trilogy: The Other Sinbad (1990), A Bad Day for Ali Baba (1991) and Scheherazade's Night Out in 1992. A.S. Byatt: The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye (short story, 1994) In Stephen King's Misery, the protagonist is forced to write a novel under threat of death or dismemberment at the hands of a crazed fan.
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Indigenous Australian literature is the fiction, plays, poems, essays and other works authored by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people of Australia. While a letter written by Bennelong to Governor Arthur Phillip in 1796 is the first known work written in English by an Aboriginal person, David Unaipon was the first Aboriginal author to ...
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Ali Cobby Eckermann (born 1963), poet; Robyn Eckersley (born 1958), political theorist; Arabella Edge (living), English-born short story writer and novelist; Harriet Edquist (living), architectural historian and curator; Elizabeth Eggleston (1934–1976), activist, author and lawyer; Anne Elder (1918–1976), poet and ballet dancer