Samuel Wagan Watson | |
---|---|
Born | 1972 Brisbane, Queensland |
Occupation | Poet |
Spouse(s) | Name unknown |
Parent(s) | Sam Watson, mother (name unknown) |
Relatives | Nicole Watson (sister), brother (name unknown) |
Samuel Wagan Watson (born 1972) is a contemporary Indigenous Australian poet.
Samuel Wagan Watson was born in Brisbane; Completed secondary studies in Morayfield State High School where his lawyer sister Nicole also completed her secondary education; whilst living in Caboolture West with his mother an Anglo-Australian and father Sam Watson Jnr; his family is Irish, German, Bundjalung and Birri Gubba. His father is the novelist and political activist, Sam Watson. His poetry ranges from observation of everyday experience to the effects of colonisation in a vividly direct, almost tactile, language. In youth, Watson says that he enjoyed fishing and diving off the end of a jetty in Brisbane with some friends.
In the late 1990s, the Brisbane City Council set up a project to raise awareness of the Boondall Wetlands. The project was set up to bring together historians, poets, photographers, environmentalists and designers and show the cultural history of the Wetlands, both the local indigenous history and the experiences of European settlers. Samuel Watson was invited to this project, with the poets Brett Dionysius and Liz Hall-Downs, and in 2000 an audio CD was produced of their work, called Blackfellas Whitefellas Wetlands. The very different voices and focus of the three poets worked together to create a sense or place and of history.
When asked in interview who had influenced him, Samuel Watson recognised the influence of his parents, and listed also Nick Cave, Tom Waits, Jack Kerouac, Charles Bukowski and Robert Adamson.
Originally, Watson tried to write short stories for various companies, but his writing was rejected, and was described as being 'bad' and 'horrible'. However, one company did compliment his writing as 'having good poetic bits in it' resulting in Watson's shift to poetry. At first, he tried sonnets as a form of poetry, but later changed to free verse.