Samuel Wagan Watson 
Author

Стихотворения

Original

Übersetzung

the crooked men английский

Переводы: de

to poem

a prelude английский

Переводы: de

to poem

carefree английский

Переводы: de

to poem

the dusk sessions английский

Переводы: de

to poem

fire английский

Переводы: de

to poem

untitled английский

Переводы: de

to poem

when dogs gamble английский

Переводы: de

to poem

valley man английский

Переводы: de

to poem

itinerant blue английский

3 a.m. escape английский

Переводы: de

to poem

Samuel Wagan Watson 
Author

* 01.01.1972, Brisbane, Австралия
Место жительства: , Австралия

Samuel Wagan Watson was born in Brisbane in 1972, of Irish, German and Aboriginal (Bundjalung and Birri Gubba) ancestory. He has been a salesman, public relations officer, fraud investigator, graphic artist, labourer, law clerk, film industry technician and an actor. He is currently a project officer in the Strategic Policy and Research Unit of Arts Queensland.

Watson’s first collection, Of muse, meandering and midnight (1999) won the David Unaipon Award for Emerging Indigenous Writers. His subsequent collections are Itinerant Blues (2001) and Hotel Bone (2001). He is also co-author of the award-winning website blackfellas, whitefellas, wetlands, commissioned by the Brisbane City Council.

Watson describes his influences in writing as Nick Cave, Tom Waites, Jack Kerouac, Charles Bukowski and the Australian poet Robert Adamson. The Aboriginal elements in his poetry take their place within contemporary, often urban, landscapes, marked by a dramatic or surrreal intensity, which suggests energies at play in them which are barely contained within their forms.

The imagery has a strong emblematic quality, and is marked by unexpected juxtapositions which combine the technological and the mythical, and virtual realities with those of the natural world. There is a strong social and political dimension to the poetry, implicit in many of the situations portrayed in the poems, in the treatment of personal memories, and in the identifications made with the poor, the itinerants, or the fugitive characters which feature in his work.