Small Acts of Disappearance: Essays on Hunger

    Research output: Creative WorksTextual Works

    Abstract

    Small Acts of Disappearance is a collection of ten essays that describes the authors affliction with an eating disorder which begins in high school, and escalates into life-threatening anorexia over the next ten years. Fiona Wright is a highly regarded poet and critic, and her account of her illness is informed by a keen sense of its contradictions and deceptions, and by an awareness of the empowering effects of hunger, which is unsparing in its consideration of the authors own actions and motivations. The essays offer perspectives on the eating disorder at different stages in Wrights life, at university, where she finds herself in a radically different social world to the one she grew up in, in Sri Lanka as a fledgling journalist, in Germany as a young writer, in her hospital treatments back in Sydney. They combine research, travel writing, memoir, and literary discussions of how writers like Christina Stead, Carmel Bird, Tim Winton, John Berryman and Louise Glück deal with anorexia and addiction; together with accounts of family life, and detailed and humorous views of hunger-induced situations of the kind that are so compelling in Wrights poetry.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationArtarmon, N.S.W.
    PublisherGiramondo
    Size193 pages ; 20 cm
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • anorexia nervosa
    • eating disorders
    • biography
    • Australia

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