|    Login    |    Register

Justice for Romeo

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Justice for Romeo

Contributors:

By (Author) Siobhan Hodge
Introduction by Dennis Haskell

ISBN:

9780648056805

Publisher:

Cordite Publishing Inc.

Imprint:

Cordite Publishing Inc.

Publication Date:

1st March 2018

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

102

Dimensions:

Width 150mm, Height 221mm, Spine 8mm

Weight:

91g

Description

Hodge's Romeo is, or was, a horse, and this collection is the first Australian book of poetry entirely given to horses and human interactions with them. Hodge's writing is spare, and the poems leave us no doubt about her view of the injustices done. Hodge's poetry ranges from Shakespearean sonnet to prose poem, its power of sensory evocation a fine vehicle for conveying such experience.

'Horses have been intrinsic to much of human history. Their connection to human activities has always been dualistic but have also been constantly beset with ironies. Equine connections to human activities have always been dualistic: horses are linked with both deities and domestic drudgery; lauded as symbols of freedom and subservience; relied upon a vital means of transportation and agricultural labour, or considered a luxurious indulgence. In Europe from the sixteenth century onwards, artistic and literary representations of horses started a tendency towards the anthropomorphic, moving away from dead-eyed mechanical portraits. In the eighteenth century, romanticised portrayals of horses began a steady rise to primacy. Today, horses maintain a liminal position enjoyed by few animals: they are not quite pets, but not quite livestock. They are still working animals, but also easily replaced by machines or human athletes. Scientific knowledge of how to best raise, train and manage horses is flourishing, yet long cultures of anecdotes and training theories, grounded in highly subjective and often questionably founded interpretations of equine behaviour, reign supreme in many circles. "Who is Romeo He was not my horse. In life he was a symptom of all that is wrong with industrial-scale equine production. He fell victim to human interests in as many ways as it was possible to fall. Well-meaning ignorance is as dangerous as malice. Amongst horse people, this is also often called love.' Siobhan Hodge

Author Bio

Siobhan Hodge has a PhD in English literature from The University of Western Australia. Her thesis focused on Sappho's legacy in English translations. Her chapbook of reflections on Sappho, Picking up the Pieces, was published in 2012 as part of the Wide Range Chapbooks series. Hodge is currently the reviews editor for Writ Review and a contributing reviewer for Cordite Poetry Review. She is also an associate editor for Rochford Street Review, and was previously a project officer for Trove. She was the winner of the Patricia Hackett Poetry Prize in 2015, and has had creative and critical works published in Axon: Creative Explorations, Peril and Westerly. She is the author of JUSTICE FOR ROMEO (Cordite Books, 2018). She divides her time between Hong Kong and Australia, and has nurtured an obsession with horses for most of her life.

See all

Other titles from Cordite Publishing Inc.