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Miriam Wei Wei Lo
(Canada, 1973)
Lo has studied writing at the universities of Western Australia and Queensland. Her first collection, Against Certain Capture, won the West Australian Premier’s Prize for Poetry in 2005. Her output over the last five years has been small, due to her radical commitment to intensively personal child-rearing, however, the poems she has produced have been widely anthologised, appearing in collections such as Over There: Poems from Singapore and Australia, Windchimes: Asia in Australian Poetry and the most recent Penguin Anthology of Australian Poetry. Miriam currently lives in Margaret River (Western Australia), and when she is not writing, she cooks, cleans, edits her husband’s sermons, and entertains three young children. Her next book is forthcoming with Salt Publishing. Through this “radical commitment” Lo’s work extends to an acute interrogation of contemporary domestic and familial spaces and relations. She comments, “It really bothers me when anyone fails to see the value of this work, but I constantly encounter people who see housework as ‘less important’ work; these are the people I meet in Singapore who assume that housework and child-minding are ‘maid’s jobs’, these are the people in Australia who can’t understand why I don’t hire a cleaner and put the kids in daycare so I can get on with being an academic or writer, these are the societies whose views of the importance of housework are reflected in the amounts they pay to people who do these jobs for them, so they can be free from ‘everyday life’ to do . . . more important things (whatever they are). OK, if Kevin Rudd had to wash the dishes after all his parties, or if Barack Obama had to keep the White House clean, they wouldn’t have time to do much else, but there was a reason for Gandhi’s famous assertion that politicians ought to clean their own toilets. It is in this context that ‘everyday life’ has become a charged topic for me and for my writing.”
Last updated: Aug 28, 2009
© Image: Miriam Wei Wei Lo
Books
Against Certain Capture, Five Islands Press, Wollongong, NSW, 2004 Essays ‘Towards a Particular Hybridity: A Beginning’, Westerly 44.4 (1999): 9-20. [Perth, Western Australia; ISSN: 0043 342X] ‘Reconfiguring a Necessary Entrapment: A Tale of Two Grandmothers’ in Beyond Good and Evil? Essays on the Literature and Culture of the Asia-Pacific Region, UWAP, Crawley, Western Australia, Dennis Haskell, Megan McKinlay and Pamina Rich, eds, pp.199–209, 2005, ISBN: 1 920694 63 3 Links Andrew Burke reviews Against Certain Capture Aaron Lee reviews Against Certain Capture Adam Aitken interview with Alvin Pang and John Kinsella |
POEMS BY Miriam Wei Wei Lo |