Michael James Terence Morrissey (born 1942) is a New Zealand poet, short story writer, novelist, essayist, editor, feature article writer, book reviewer and columnist. He is the author of thirteen volumes of poetry, two collections of short stories, a memoir, two stage plays and four novels and he has edited five other books.
Michael Morrissey was educated at St Peter's College, Auckland and studied law and English literature at the University of Auckland. In 1967, he was the editor of Craccum , the University of Auckland student newspaper.
Michael Morrissey has published five books of fiction and 13 books of poetry.
Morrissey's fiction and poetry have been published in literary journals in New Zealand and other countries. His work has appeared in Islands,Mate Landfall , Morepork, Climate, Poetry New Zealand, Listener , Pilgrims, Rambling Jack, Printout, brief, Bravado, Comment, Echoes, Tango, Cornucopia, IKA, Takahe, PhantomBillstickers, (New Zealand); Blackmail, Trout (New Zealand online), Ocarina, Literary Half Yearly (India); New Poetry, Poetry Australia, Mattoid, Inprint (Australia); Gargoyle, Fiction International , Chelsea (United States); Percutio (France); Kunapipi (Denmark).while his stories have also appeared in Metro and on newsroom.co.nz (Queen of the night , Polack is warming (2022), Sumatran cannabis and Perhaps it was like this (2023)). [1]
Morrissey's novel, Tropic of Skorpeo, published in 2012, is a satiric sci-fi fantasy in thriller mode.
In 1979, he was the first Writer-in-Residence at the University of Canterbury and in 1985, the first New Zealand participant in the International Writing Programme at the University of Iowa from which he earned an Honorary Fellowship in Writing. In 1986, he was the New Zealand delegate at the 48th World Congress of International PEN in New York. While in New York, Morrissey met many famous writers. Subsequently, he wrote obituaries based on personal encounters with Saul Bellow (7 May 2005), Kurt Vonnegut (28 April 2007) and Norman Mailer (1 December 2007) – all published in the New Zealand Listener. He has also written accounts of encounters with Samuel Beckett and Susan Sontag, published in Brief magazine.
A Fulbright Cultural Travel Award in 1981 enabled him to visit several leading American universities where he studied the teaching of creative writing. On his return to New Zealand, he founded the Waiheke Summer Writing School which ran from 1983 to 1991. He has taught creative writing through several Community Education Centres, and Continuing Education, University of Auckland, and was a tutor at the New Zealand Institute of Business Studies, Auckland between 2008 and 2010.
In 2012, he was appointed Writer-in-Residence at the University of Waikato.
His anthology The New Fiction (1985) was the first anthology of New Zealand postmodern fiction. His 80 plus published short stories vary from neo-social realism to surreal and postmodern styles and also deploy the introduction of famous personalities into the New Zealand landscape such as Jack Kerouac, Charles Fort, Andy Warhol and Franz Kafka. His fiction has been translated into Mandarin, Japanese and Hungarian.
Morrissey's essays have appeared in Landfall (My Auckland, Work [2] ); in NZ Review of Books (A rare breed and a reflection on the death of Hone Tuwhare, entitled No ordinary son [3] ); in Islands (Whole man ... tremble, a tribute to Frank Sargeson [4] ); in brief (The (my) house, Landing on the moon, and Between two Pacific Islands [5] ). Michael Morrissey's blog [6] also includes a number of essays, including: Android kill for me! Hitler, Lorde, The greatest inventions of the last 2000 years, Forgotten silver). His essays also include a study of Wystan Curnow's art writings, tributes to other writers and comments on cultural matters.
A short film by Costa Botes of one of Morrissey's stories, Stalin's Sickle, won the Grand Jury Prize at the Clermont-Ferrand Short Film Festival, in France, in 1988.
Since 1992, Morrissey has been a regular reader at Poetry Live Auckland (a weekly poetry reading set up by poet David Mitchell in 1980 and held at Auckland's Thirsty Dog). The poems he read at those events have been published in the Poetry Live Auckland anthologies. He has also read at Lopdell House Gallery's Rhythm and Verse events.
An autobiographical essay, Self portrait: Michael Morrissey, published on newsroom.co.nz in 2021, [1] traces Morrissey's writing career and identifies important early influences on the development of his writing, while a 1983 interview with Michael Morrissey, published in Landfall 146., [7] also contains information on his evolution as a writer.
Morrissey's memoir, Taming the Tiger [8] (2011) documents his experiences with bipolar disorder, graphically describing two serious bipolar episodes and his forced hospitalisation. These episodes and Morrissey's mania were the subject of a feature-length documentary, Daytime Tiger, directed by Costa Botes, which premiered at the [New Zealand international film festival in 2011. An abridgement of Taming the Tiger in five episodes was read on RNZ National Radio on 23–27 July 2012.
In his extended essay on Morrissey's poetry in Poetry New Zealand in 2008, poet and critic John Horrocks [9] described the range of Morrissey's verse, noting also that "one of the pleasures of reading these poems is the variety of personae assumed by the poet. This reflects an underlying energy that emerges in startling ways". Horrocks writes "The venturings in these poems are like those ... of the nameless principal of Henry Miller's novel Sexus. There is the same intentness and curiosity about ideas, the writer's licence to draw anything into consideration ... These are some of the reasons why Michael Morrissey's poetry stands apart". Horrocks says that Morrissey's collection Dreams "disturbs as it taps into the familiar territory of dreams: journeys, being trapped, superheroes, erotic encounters, sudden transformations, capricious authority figures and various kinds of death. These are extraordinary poems". Horrocks notes that Morrissey's development as a poet was influenced by Wallace Stevens and Sylvia Plath, and later by Curnow, Tony Beyer and Ian Wedde. Horrocks likens Morrissey's poetry variously to Kafka, Ginsberg, Miller and, especially Walt Whitman.
Critic Jack Ross [10] notes that Morrissey's "fictions ranged from the Barthelme-like fables of The Fat Lady & The Astronomer (1981) to the gentle postmodernism of Doctorow's Ragtime in his classic story Jack Kerouac Sat Down beside the Wanganui River & Wept ... Paradise to Come (1997), his book of two novellas describing New Zealand's most distant and most recent waves of immigration, remains Morrissey's most accomplished and moving fiction to date". Ross also expresses his admiration for Morrissey's "... earlier works ... where a basic sense of Sargesonian realism underlies his taste for the extravagant and postmodern" Those earlier works, Ross notes, include "most of the contents of his two books of short stories, ... as well as the three novellas".
Reviewing Taming the Tiger in North & South magazine in November 2011, Paul Little [11] wrote:
"Michael Morrissey has written a brave, funny account of his mental illness. It begins when he has a breakdown while teaching a writing class – the sort of outburst that could easily be passed off as someone having a bad day. In his case, however, it seems no time at all before he is convinced he has AIDS, develops a way to end crime by holding neighbourhood parties, and comes up with a scheme to make millions by encouraging people to get naked on Waiheke – like that's hard. Finally, he is convinced he is the messiah and wrestles with the tricky question of whether or not to tell people. Lithium comes into play and he slowly returns to normal. Then follows a cycle of feeling well, going off medication and becoming ill again. He learns in the course of dealing with his own illness that his mother suffered from the same complaint and that her mother had died in an asylum. It's a heart-rending and harrowing account, made compellingly readable by Morrissey's formidable literary skills, which have seldom been put to such good use. The objectivity of his self-portrait is remarkable but the real hero is his wife, Anne. He didn't have any choice about living with his condition. She did, and chose to stay, which can't have been easy when he decided she was a demon he had to destroy. ..... [This] is such a raw and thorough examination of a not uncommon condition. The author's stoicism brings to mind the last words of Samuel Beckett's The Unnameable: 'I can't go on. I'll go on.' It deserves a prominent place in the annals not just of literature about mental health but of New Zealand autobiography".
An extended interview with Michael Morrissey (by Suzanne Olsen), appeared in Landfall 146.
Morrissey's short stories have been widely anthologised, including in All the Dangerous Animals Are in Zoos (1981), New Zealand Writing Since 1945 (1983), I Have Seen the Future (1986), Metro Fiction (1987), Antipodes New Writing (1987), Short Story International (1987), Penguin Book of Contemporary New Zealand Short Stories (1989), The Oxford Book of New Zealand Short Stories (1992), The Faber Book of Contemporary South Pacific Stories (1994), Rutherford's Dreams (1995), Essential New Zealand Short Stories (2002 and 2009).
His poems have also been widely anthologised. Poems by Morrissey appear in The Penguin Book of Contemporary New Zealand Poetry (edited by Miriama Evans, Harvey McQueen and Ian Wedde (1989)), 100 New Zealand Poems (edited by Bill Manhire (1993)), Big Weather: Poems of Wellington. (selected by Gregory O’Brien and Louise White (2000)), 121 New Zealand Poems (chosen by Bill Manhire (2005)), the New Zealand Poetry Society's anthology Ice Diver (2011), Poetry New Zealand (2008), the New Zealand Poetry Yearbook (2020) and Live Lines. the series of anthologies of Poetry Live Auckland.
Morrissey taught creative writing over many years. In 1983, he set up the annual Waiheke Writing School on Waiheke Island in the Hauraki Gulf. He ran that school until 1991. Other tutors in the Waiheke school included the novelist Mike Johnson, script writer Neil Illingworth and the novelist and poet Daphne de Jong, author of 75 romance novels. Among the alumni of the Waiheke programme is food writer Annabel Langbein. Morrissey also taught creative writing in the University of Auckland's continuing education programme.
Between 2000 and 2013, Michael Morrissey contributed a monthly book review column to Investigate magazine (since renamed and reformatted as HIS/HERS). He has also reviewed books for Listener , Landfall , Islands, The Sunday Star-Times, the New Zealand Herald, The Press, Printout, and Quote Unquote.
The launch of Morrissey's novella Terra Incognita 1526 on 12 June 1997 led to violence and four arrests. The novella told the story of the (fictional) arrival in New Zealand in 1526, of a Spanish ship. The ship's crew of conquistadores made friends with the Māori they encountered and helped them fight a rival iwi. Morrissey organised a re-enactment of the Spaniards' arrival in New Zealand, the greeting of them by local Māori.
Auckland novelist Graeme Lay, who attended the launch, described the incident in New Zealand Books Vol 28 No. 4 Issue 124. [12] He wrote that a 53-foot boat was hired from the Maritime Museum. An historical hobbyist group called the Knights Draconis was recruited to play the conquistadores. A group from the Hoani Waititi Marae were hired to play the local Māori warriors.
Lay wrote: “... right on cue, there appeared the long boat, crammed with Spaniards, their helmets gleaming in the winter sunshine. The crowd buzzed with expectation. A Māori sentry blew a conch to signal the arrival of the strangers. ... But the war party did not appear... Instead, a solitary, bare-chested Maori man descended to the beach ... wielding a taiaha. As the ... Spaniards disembarked, the man rushed forward and began attacking them with his staff. The crowd was at first impressed; this was very realistic theatre. When the man began to whack the visitors more wildly, we became uneasy. ... Helmets flew off, blood spurted from the Spaniards' noses. This was not in the script ...”
The attacker also lunged at Morrissey who then called the police.
Graeme Lay reports that Morrissey recalled that he had been contacted by a kuia (whom he later learned was the veteran activist Titewhai Harawira) several days before the event to express concern about the launch. He had not acted on that warning. Lay quotes Morrissey as saying that his dismissive response may have led to the assault on the event.
Lay wrote: "Before the police arrived, the crowd on the foreshore became angry. Several of the Spaniards had been injured. People in the crowd ... were condemnatory of [the assault]. .... So, the launch of Terra Incognita 1526 turned out to be a lamentation more than a celebration. Books were bought, more in sympathy than enthusiasm. Nevertheless, 60 copies were sold at the launch, and extensive media coverage of the assault ensured that many more copies were sold after that".
Lay reports that the assailant, Arthur Harawira – Titewhai Harawira's son – told the television news “'If you say the Spaniards conquered us then you can take it up somewhere else.' Morrissey thinks: 'Harawira believed my book was a work of history, not a novel'”. Lay concluded "They don't launch them like that anymore".
The launch of Terra Incognita 1526 wasn't Morrissey's only attention-grabbing book launch; he once invited all the people he could track down with the name "Michael Morrissey" to the launch of one of his poetry books.
Morrissey was also awarded major project grants by Creative New Zealand in 1993 and 1998.
An extended interview with Michael Morrissey can be found in Landfall 146. [7] There is an account of Morrissey's career in the Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature. [13] while Morrissey's fiction is the subject of an extended essay by Lawrence Jones in his book Barbed Wire & Mirrors Essays on New Zealand Prose. [14] An interesting perspective of the diversity of Morrissey's writing and his career can be found in Jack Ross' blog Imaginary Museum http://mairangibay.blogspot.co.nz/2012/10/two-writers-2-michael-morrissey.html. Morrissey's work is represented in the New Zealand Literature Archive https://web.archive.org/web/20140819001059/http://www.nzlf.auckland.ac.nz/author/?a_id=118, where many of the reviews of his work are referenced. Morrissey was interviewed by Kim Hill on Radio New Zealand about his memoir Taming the Tiger on 28 May 2011.
New Zealand literature is literature, both oral and written, produced by the people of New Zealand. It often deals with New Zealand themes, people or places, is written predominantly in New Zealand English, and features Māori culture and the use of the Māori language. Before the arrival and settlement of Europeans in New Zealand in the 19th century, Māori culture had a strong oral tradition. Early European settlers wrote about their experiences travelling and exploring New Zealand. The concept of a "New Zealand literature", as distinct from English literature, did not originate until the 20th century, when authors began exploring themes of landscape, isolation, and the emerging New Zealand national identity. Māori writers became more prominent in the latter half of the 20th century, and Māori language and culture have become an increasingly important part of New Zealand literature.
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