Reading Helen Koukoutsis: Cicada Chimes

Authors

  • Anna Dimitriou Western Sydney University

Keywords:

multicultural literature

Abstract

In her collection of poems Cicada Chimes, Helen Koukoutsis, an Australian poet of Greek Orthodox heritage explores the conflicting emotions produced by death and loss. The collection begins with her father’s funeral and ends with a dramatic manifesto that shows grief’s expressive power. The questions that frame this reading of Cicada Chimes are:  how does this modern Australian poet utilise cultural and religious traditions for elegy? What type of spirituality does Koukoutsis identify with? And how does her work both draw on, and critically distance itself from traditional Greek rituals of lament? I will argue that Koukoutsis’ speaker positions herself both inside and outside her Orthodox faith tradition. Her inherited Eastern Mediterranean beliefs and customs are a source of consolation for her, but they are also sites of alienation and oppression. This collection of poems negotiates this contradictory relationship to tradition.

References

Anderson, Herbert. ’Common Grief, Complex Grieving.’ Pastoral Psychology 59: (2010):127-136

Clewell, Tammy. Mourning, Modernism, Postmodernism, Houndmills: Palgrave MacMillan, 2009.

Devlin- Glass Frances and Lyn McCredden (eds), Feminist Poetics of the Sacred: Creative Suspicions, Oxford: Oxford University, 2001, p. 4.

Dickinson, Emily. The Poetry of Emily Dickinson, Thunder Bay Press, 2015. ProQuest Ebook Central, https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.ezproxy.uws.edu.au/lib/UWSAU/detail.action?docID=4552115.

Dimitriou, Anna. “Blending and Distorting Genre: Comparing Diasporic Texts of Five Diasporic Writers in the Antipodes” Athens Journal of Philology, vol. 4, issue 2, June 2017, pp.111-128.

Fernald, Anne E. Virginia Woolf : Feminism and the Reader. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Print.

Jose, Nicholas (Ed). Macquarie PEN Anthology of Australian Literature. Crow’s Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2009. Print

Kalymnios, Kostas. ‘The Greek Identity in Anglophone Literature of Greeks in Australia’ (in Greek) (Trans.) Anna Dimitriou, Parousia: Epitheori Logou kai Techne, (Presence: A Review of Work and Art), 50 Oct/Nov, (Eds.) Maria Herodotou, Thanassis Spilias, Christos Fifis, Athens: EALOG, 2009.

Koukoutsis, Helen. Cicada Chimes. Port Adelaide: Ginninderra Press, 2017.

------- ‘Re-imagining the After-Life: Emily Dickinson and the Cultural Conversation of Alternative Faiths, Seminar, Writing and Society Research Centre: Western Sydney University, 2017.

Wilner, Eleanor. “The Poetics of Emily Dickinson.” ELH, vol. 38, no. 1, 1971, pp. 126–154., JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2872366.

Woolf, Virginia. ‘The Mark on the Wall’ from Monday or Tuesday, London: Hogarth Press, 1921.

Zengas, Hariclea. ‘Re-Defining Parameters: Greek Australian Literature’ in Re-Defining Parameters: Greek Australian Literature in Australian Made: A Multicultural Reader, Ed. Sonia Mycak and Amit Sarwal, Sydney University Press, Sydney, 2010.

Downloads

Published

2019-12-24