Longlisted for the 2026 Stella Prize

Natalie Harkin – Apron-Sorrow / Sovereign-Tea

Fiction · Wakefield Press

About the Book


She lingers in archives / her trace is my memory / we labour dig sweat blister imagine / know them more intimately / so much work to be done to clean up this colonial mess.

Apron-Sorrow / Sovereign-Tea evokes an embodied reckoning with Aboriginal women’s domestic labour and servitude drawing from oral history and the State’s official record. It explores the complexity of Aboriginal women’s experiences and survival strategies, and intergenerational stories that span loss, love, sorrow, solidarity, resistance, and refusal.

Apron-Sorrow / Sovereign-Tea is a powerful reckoning with the state archives that illuminates and vividly remembers the harrowing experiences of Aboriginal women and girls in domestic servitude.”

– 2026 Stella Prize Judges

About the Author


Natalie Harkin

Natalie Harkin is a Narungga creative arts-based Research Fellow with the Indigenous Studies team at Flinders University (Adelaide), Kaurna Yerta. She is passionate about archival justice, engaging archival-poetic methods to document community Memory Stories, and Indigenous Living-Legacy archive innovations for our time. Her books include Dirty Words (Cordite Books) and Archival-Poetics (Vagabond Press).

Further Reading


Reviews 

“This is a significant book, equally beautiful and brutal. Harkin should be praised for laying out these documents and stories for us, adding to Aboriginal archives, and to Australia’s authenticated history.” – Heather Taylor Johnson, InDaily 

Apron-Sorrow / Sovereign-Tea’s composite construction, grounded in Harkin’s archival-poetic practice, creates a book of rare aesthetic sophistication, purposefully crafted to transcend the linearity and containment of the colonial archive.” – Samuel Cox, Mascara Literary Review

Links

Read Natalie’s essay in The Conversation.

Listen to Natalie’s episode on Archive Fever podcast.

 

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