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Sascha Morrell

Sascha Morrell

Sascha Morrell is a Lecturer in Literary Studies at Monash University and was a Visiting Research Scholar at New York University in Fall 2015. She has published widely on American and Australian literatures and literary modernism, with a special interest in how representations of Australia in US literature and culture evolved in relation to representations of the US South and the Caribbean from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. Her poetry and short fiction have appeared in literary journals and anthologies, including Going Down Swinging, Meanjin, The Mays, and Cordite.

'Joyce Carol Oates: A Body in the Service of Mind: An ever-prolific American polymath' by Sascha Morrell

ABR Arts 11 November 2022
Joyce Carol Oates
Here is a list of things you won’t see the great American writer Joyce Carol Oates doing in this documentary: looting, detonating a bomb, strangling children, having sex, eating, eating human flesh, sleeping, kissing, cussing, masturbating, masturbating over a corpse, screaming, lobotomising a lover, shedding tears (though she comes close), or being murdered. In case you don’t know, all these ... (read more)

Sascha Morrell reviews 'An Ordinary Ecstasy' by Luke Carman

November 2022, no. 448 25 October 2022
Sascha Morrell reviews 'An Ordinary Ecstasy' by Luke Carman
Our high school art teacher would often look at a student’s work and judge it ‘interesting’. Sometimes this was a written comment, accompanied by a lacklustre mark like 14/20, which led us to suspect – perhaps rightly – that ‘interesting’ was a euphemism for ‘inept’. Now I wonder if it occasionally meant: curious, out of the ordinary, sui generis, hard to grade or categorise, or ... (read more)

Sascha Morrell reviews 'The Flight of Birds: A novel in twelve stories' by Joshua Lobb

December 2019, no. 417 25 November 2019
Sascha Morrell reviews 'The Flight of Birds: A novel in twelve stories' by Joshua Lobb
Humans cannot imagine avian perspectives, Joshua Lobb admits, but his stories explore what we might learn from the attempt. Some of Lobb’s strategies are familiar from much recent fiction with ecological themes, such as the use of an educated, intellectually curious narrator-protagonist whose wide reading provides a convenient means of introducing diverse facts and anecdotes about birds into lyr ... (read more)