<div dir="auto">“Speculating: That Intelligent Wonderment”<div dir="auto"><br><div dir="auto">A Talk By Dr. Merlinda Bobis
</div><div dir="auto">The Australian National University
</div><div dir="auto">Wednesday, 5 February 2025 Pacific Standard Time (UTC-8)
</div><div dir="auto">This talk will be held online.
</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">Zoom link: <a href="https://tinyurl.com/mbucrfeb2025" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">https://tinyurl.com/mbucrfeb2025</a>
</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">Dr. Merlinda Bobis is an award-winning trilingual Filipino-Australian writer, performance maker, and scholar. Her creative and critical works explore issues on gender, environment,</div><div dir="auto">migration, borders, memory, language, ethics and care, and decoloniality. She published 4 novels, 6 poetry books, 2 collections of short stories, a monograph of lectures on creative</div><div dir="auto">research and had 10 dramatic works performed internationally, some by the author herself.
</div><div dir="auto">Her new novel on trees will come out later this year. Influenced by Philippine ways of ‘feeling-thinking-doing’, her scholarly articles emerge from grassroots theorising and creative-critical empathy. She developed and facilitated community arts and advocacy projects on environment, resilience of women and girls, migration and language, and cross-cultural engagement. Composing songs is her latest creative preoccupation. She is</div><div dir="auto">currently Honorary Senior Lecturer at The Australian National University. Among her literary awards are the 2021 Canberra Critics’ Circle Award for her collection of short stories The</div><div dir="auto">Kindness of Birds, which in 2022 was also shortlisted for the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction in the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Awards and the Queensland Literary Awards; the 2016 Christina Stead Prize for Fiction for her novel Locust Girl. A Lovesong;</div><div dir="auto">and three Philippine National Book Awards (2016: Locust Girl, 2014: Fish-Hair Woman, 2000: White Turtle). She also received recognition for her poetry, among them the Philippines’ Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards in Literature and shortlistings in major Australian awards. Her play Rita’s Lullaby won the 1998 Prix Italia, 1998 Australian Writers’</div><div dir="auto">Guild Award, and 1995 Ian Reed Radio Drama Prize.
</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">This talk is co-sponsored by UCR’s Department of English, Speculative Fictions and Cultures of Science Program, Southeast Asia: Text, Ritual, and Performance Program, in</div><div dir="auto">partnership with with the American Association of Australasian Literary Studies (AAALS).
</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">For inquiries please contact Professor Weihsin Gui at <a href="mailto:weihsing@ucr.edu" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">weihsing@ucr.edu</a>.</div></div></div>