Extinction Elegies
As countless species disappear due to global environmental change, we edge closer to the next ‘great extinction’ – the sixth in our planet's history. Extinction Elegies takes the elegy – a poetic form traditionally used to reflect on human losses – and refocuses it through lyric attention on the non-human realm.
Extinction Elegies is a series of poetic commissions, performances, publications and recordings that deepen empathy with endangered and extinct species.
Red Room Poetry, in collaboration with Durham Centre for Cultural Ecologies (Durham University), has commissioned six celebrated Australian poets to create and record new elegies that reflect on losses and endangerment of Australian species. John Kinsella laments the Christmas Island Pipistrelle, Michelle Cahill the King Island Emu, and Bruce Pascoe the Azure Kingfisher. Together with poems by Ali Cobby Eckermann, Mark Tredinnick and Stuart Cooke, these elegies remind us how human life is intertwined with all life on earth.
Write a poem, save a quoll!
In awareness of Australia’s 300+ threatened animals and plants, we invite you to write a poem about an endangered Australian animal or plant. For every poem we receive, we’ll give $1 to Rewilding Australia to help save our quolls, devils and dingoes.
Send your poem to extinction@redroomcompany.org
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Extinction Elegies radio series
A three-part radio series with poets and extinction experts John Woinarski, Sarah Bekessy and Thomas Bristow exploring losses of the non-human world to encourage awareness and empathy, and inspire action through poetry.
Listen here >