Brentley Frazer

Dr
Brentley Frazer
BornJanuary 1972
EducationPh.D (creative writing). Master of Arts (writing).
Occupationpoet/writer
Known forPoetry, Scoundrel Days: A Memoir
Notable workScoundrel Days: A Memoir 2017, Aboriginal to Nowhere: new poems 2016, A Dark Samadhi: poems + microtexts 2003
StyleDirty Realism Grunge lit Transgressive fiction creative non-fiction
TitleDr
Websitehttp://www.brentley.com

Brentley Frazer is an Australian poet widely known for his dirty realist, gritty, Gen. X memoir Scoundrel Days (UQP, 2017).[1]

Brentley has been a guest at numerous literary festivals, poetry readings, culture conserves and academic conferences, including: The Queensland Poetry Festival, The Australian National Poetry Festival, The Sydney Poetry Festival, Brisbane Writers Festival, The Wellington International Poetry Festival, The Oxfam Bookfest in London, "Spoken" and "Couplet" at the State Library of Queensland, The Sydney Writers Festival, Asia Pacific Writers and Translators and the Australasian Association of Writing Programs (Massey University 2014,[2] Swinburne University 2015,[2] University of Canberra 2016[3]).

From 2001-2013 he was publisher and editor of Retort Magazine ISSN 1445-7164[4] and was co-founder of The Vision Area (1998-2000)[5] and a founding member of the Brisbane spoken word event Speed Poets (2003 - 2017).[6] In 2012 he completed a MA at James Cook University under the supervision of Lindsay Simpson. In December 2017 he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy from Griffith University under the supervision of Nigel Krauth and the poet Anthony Lawrence.[7]

Brentley's memoir Scoundrel Days: a memoir was published by University of Queensland Press in March, 2017.[8]

  1. ^ "Austlit — Brentley Frazer". Austlit. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  2. ^ a b ""Conference Presentations"". Academia. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  3. ^ ""The Authorised Theft Papers"". Australasian Association of Writing Programs. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  4. ^ "National Library of Australia: Archive of Retort Magazine 2001-2014". National Library of Australia. Pandora Archive. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  5. ^ Barr, Todd (2005). Words to walk by : exploring literary Brisbane. Sullivan, Rodney J. St Lucia, Qld.: University of Queensland Press. p. 54. ISBN 9780702235177. OCLC 62547775.
  6. ^ Speedpoets : the best of 2003. Highgate Hill, Qld.: Impressed Publishing. 2003. ISBN 9780975161838. OCLC 224221900.
  7. ^ Frazer, Brentley (21 December 2017). "Scoundrel Days: Writing Rebellion". Griffith University Research Repository. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  8. ^ "Scoundrel Days: A Memoir. Author: Brentley Frazer". University of Queensland Press. Retrieved 31 March 2018.