

Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, judges’ comments Despite the diversity of the poems, there is a consistent sense throughout that political struggle without love is ultimately futile…It is rare to encounter a book which operates so effortlessly on the intellectual, poetic, and political registers. NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, judges’ commentsĪbove all, Harvest Lingo presents a truly unique poetic vision. The poet challenges empire while portraying the lives and experiences of First Nations peoples with intimacy and grace. Urgent, poignant and compelling…Throughout, Fogarty interrogates expression and form, wielding the English language itself as a decolonising tool. They are an expression of the ‘harvest lingo’ which gives the collection its title. Fogarty’s poems are bold and fierce, at times challenging and confronting, moved by strong rhythms and a remarkable freedom with language. There are intensely felt lyrics of personal experience, and poems which contemplate Fogarty’s own position as a poet and an activist, speaking with and for his community. Other poems tell of encounters between people and between cultures, address historical and cultural issues and political events, and pay tribute to important Indigenous figures.

Deeply empathetic, these poems are remarkable for the connections they draw between the social problems the poet encounters in this country – poverty, class division, corruption – and those he sees in contemporary Australia, besetting his own people.
#Lingo lingo series
He is a leading Indigenous rights activist, and one of Australia’s foremost poets, and this collection displays all of the urgency, energy and linguistic audacity for which Fogarty is known.Īt the centre of the collection is a series of poems written in India. Harvest Lingo is the fourteenth collection of poems by Lionel Fogarty, a Murri man with traditional connections to the Yugambeh people from south of Brisbane and the Kudjela people of north Queensland. It’s not that I’m in love with English, I just know that it can be used as a tool. – Lionel Fogarty

The most important thing for me is to see the warriorship and leadership from the detribalised written languages that will point out the fact that English is a great tool to be used. SHORTLISTED: NSW Premier’s Literary Awards – Indigenous Writer’s Prize 2023 SHORTLISTED: Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards – Indigenous Writing 2023
