Kris Alan Hemensley (born 26 April 1946) is an English-Australianpoet who has published around 20 collections of poetry. Through the late 1960s and '70s he was involved in poetry workshops at La Mama, and edited the literary magazines Our Glass, The Ear in a Wheatfield, and others. The Ear played an important role in providing a place where poets writing outside what was then the mainstream (such as Jennifer Maiden[1]) could publish their work. In 1969 and 1970 he presented the program Kris Hemensley's MelbourneonABC Radio. In the 1970s he was poetry editor for Meanjin
The son of an Egyptian mother and an English father who was stationed in Egypt with the Royal Air Force, Hemensley was born on the Isle of Wight, and spent his early childhood in Alexandria. He visited Australia at the age of 18, and emigrated there in 1966. He was awarded the Christopher Brennan Award in 2005, which recognizes poetry of "sustained quality and distinction".
Hemensley managed Collected Works, a specialist poetry bookshop in Melbourne, Australia, until it closed down in late 2018.[2]
Martin Duwell, ‘Kris Hemensley,’ in A Possible Contemporary Poetry: Interviews with Thirteen Poets from the New Australian Poetry (St Lucia, Qld: Makar Press, 1982), pp. 50–66.
Carl Harrison-Ford, ‘Poetics before Politics: A Note on Kris Hemensley’s "New Australian Poetry",’ Meanjin Quarterly 29.2 (1970), pp. 226–31.
Kris Hemensley, ‘First Look at "The New Australian Poetry",’ Meanjin Quarterly 29.1 (1970), pp. 118–21.
Kris Hemensley, Introduction, The Best of the Ear: The Ear in a Wheatfield, 1973–1976: A Portrait of a Magazine (Clifton Hill, Vic: Rigmorale Books, 1985).
Kris Hemensley, ‘『…The Wild Assertion of Vitality』’ Australian Literary Studies 8.2 (1977), pp. 226–39.
Marcus O’Donnell, ‘Kris Hemensley: Reflections on Three Generations,’ The Small Press Times (1992), p. 1.
Ken Taylor, ‘Kris Hemensley’s Melbourne,’ Melbourne On My Mind (Melbourne: ABC, 1976), pp. 49–63.
Jim Tulip, ‘Towards an Australian Modernism: New Writings of Kris Hemensley,’ Southerly 37.2 (1977), pp. 142–51.