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y separately published work icon Plumwood Mountain [Online] periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... September 2016 of Plumwood Mountain [Online] est. 2014 Plumwood Mountain [Online]
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 2016 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Mary Cresswell Reviews Sunset by Maggie Walsh, Mary Cresswell , single work review essay
'There is enormous life in these poems, a vitality that surrounds you as you read them. Even the forms of the poems change, ranging from ballads to prose poems to separated lines.' (Introduction)
Mary Cresswell Reviews Engraft by Michele Seminara, Mary Cresswell , single work review essay
'The poems in this collection are energetic – engaging – and most definitely engrafted, sometimes literally.[1]The poet gives us found poems from Kafka, Dickinson, Joyce; there are remix poems using Shakespeare and Robert Lowell; Solzhenitsyn, Djuna Barnes are the source of erasure poems. ' (Introduction)
Phillip Hall Reviews Hegel’s Owl by Sheridan Palmer, Phillip Hall , single work review essay

'I have long loved the writing of Bernard Smith for his passionate and rigorous application of Marxist theory to a reading of art history and to the story of European colonialism in the South Pacific. For such landmark endeavours, Bernard Smith will always be remembered as a most significant public intellectual. And Sheridan Palmer’s new biography, Hegel’s Owl, is an elegant and powerful tribute to this aspect of Smith’s life. In describing the formation and expression of Smith’s ideas, Palmer makes a remarkable contribution to Australian intellectual history.' (Introduction)

Phillip Hall Reviews Unexpected Clearing by Rose Lucas and Line of Drift by Robyn Rowland, Phillip Hall , single work review essay
'Robyn Rowland and Rose Lucas write hymns of praise to the natural world where the anticipation of regeneration in domestic routine, intimacy and travel is juxtaposed with the disturbance of bushfire, old age and bereavement. And both poets are steadfast in advocating for the transformative capacity of the arts in documenting these moments. ' (Introduction)
Siobhan Hodge Reviews Jennifer Maiden’s The Fox Petition, Siobhan Hodge , single work review essay
'In her latest collection, Jennifer Maiden continues her politically-charged examinations of Australia in a richly historical and simultaneously contemporaneous poetics. The Fox Petition is a deft examination of a range of issues, central to which is the notion of belonging or not belonging – native or immigrant – and the ironies and hypocrisies involved in such distinctions.' (Introduction)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 28 Jun 2017 09:04:13
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