The three poems collected here form part of a larger project exploring the littoral zone of Australia’s southern coastlines. The littoral zone is the intertidal region — alternately covered and uncovered by the tides — and extends to include shallow reefs, beaches, and the spray zones of rocky coasts. It is a place of transition, where terrestrial sand dunes give way to tidepools and kelp gardens, where waves rise and break across the sea floor, and where life-forms shift from breathing air to drawing oxygen from water. It is a space of vibrant unpredictability, a familiar yet complex landscape of entangled ecosystems and diverse species. This project arises from a desire to draw attention to the interwoven lives of species such as the leafy seadragon and its fragile kelp habitat, and to consider how humans might connect with the more-than-human world in ecologically conscious ways. My poetry asks how a littoral poetics might both raise awareness of the intertidal bioregion and enact a sense of human interconnection with the kelp and seaweed, animals, dune grasses, coastal plants, oceanic movements, and the weather systems of the southern littoral zone.
Sophie Finlay (Mon,) studied this question.
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