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y separately published work icon Westerly periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2019... vol. 64 no. 1 2019 of Westerly est. 1956 Westerly
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2019 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Alaskai"It’s late June in New York", Sarah Holland-Batt , single work poetry (p. 12-13)
Five Haiku, Cassie Lynch , single work poetry (p. 21-23)
Listening to the Stories Woven Around Us, Brooke Collins-Gearing , single work essay
'I grew up in Kamilaroi country, the land of the goanna. I grew up bathing in and being sustained by the river system and artesian tracks. I grew up knowing of my Murri heritage, of the old people living in tin huts on the banks of the Mehi, but not of the deep knowledge embedded in land all around; for me, it took many years of different kinds of reading and listening to learn how to pay attention to this knowledge.' (Introduction)
(p. 24-33)
Anatomy of a Lignotuberi"Stacked on the back of a truck,", Nandi Chinna , single work poetry (p. 36-37)
Koolark—Homei"From the woodlands to the Sclerophyll,", Daniel Hansen , single work poetry (p. 38-39)
Ravensthorpei"Crucible of eucalypts", Luke Sweedman , single work poetry (p. 40-41)
Jarrah (Buying the Block)i"I am a shooter, the seller says", Reneé Pettitt-Schipp , single work poetry
 
(p. 42)
Red Flowering Gumi"Home is a syllable in your heart. In order to speak it whole, you must clap", Scott-Patrick Mitchell , single work poetry (p. 43)
Meditation on the Pointlessness of Poetry, Yu Ouyang , single work essay
'What is poetry? I no longer ask such questions. Instead, every time I begin a new term with new classes on writing in English, sometimes creative writing, I tell myself and them: Forget what poetry is. Instead, write down your first poem on a blank piece of paper, in English, a language you have spent years learning.  (Introduction)
(p. 44-52)
Night Shifting, Simone Lazaroo , single work short story (p. 53-55)
The Space Inside His Fisti"A play-doh hand-grab,", Melinda Smith , single work poetry (p. 56-57)
Gwen Harwood's Nightfalli"From 18 Pine Street, West Hobart she has seen him walking", Chris Konrad , single work poetry (p. 58)
Boochani Bound : A Promethean Meditation on Refugee Detention Centres, Peter D. Mathews , single work criticism
'In 2016, the Indigenous author Melissa Lucashenko delivered the Barry Andrews Memorial Lecture, a speech that was published the following year in JASAL as ‘I Pity the Poor Immigrant’. This remarkable text bears the following epigraph: ‘Dedicated to all refugees currently imprisoned by the Australian State’ (1, original italics). The obvious context for Lucashenko’s statement is the ongoing political discussion about the Australian government’s treatment of asylum seekers, centred around the draconian practice of imprisoning refugees in off-shore processing centres such as Nauru and Manus Island. Australian literary authors have been particularly vocal in their criticism of the injustice of these policies: in 2015, for instance, Tim Winton published ‘Start the Soul Searching Australia’, a Palm Sunday editorial in the Sydney Morning Herald in which he pleaded for a change of heart based on a mixture of Australian and religious values; in 2017, Felicity Castagna published the novel No More Boats, set during the 2001 Tampa crisis when a Norwegian cargo ship carrying 438 refugees was refused entry into Australia, an incident that shaped that year’s federal election and the policy that later became known as the Pacific Solution; while in 2018, Michelle de Kretser used her speech accepting the Miles Franklin Award for The Life to Come to excoriate Australia’s politicians for the use of detention centres on Nauru and Manus. The literary moment of greatest impact, however, has been the publication in July 2018 of Behrouz Boochani’s No Friend But the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison, a blend of memoir and poetry written in Farsi that Boochani wrote in prison, then secretly transmitted to his translator, Omid Tofighian, via text messages.' (Introduction)
(p. 59-71)
Treesi"Inland, and hours removed from the sea, a white tree", Heather Taylor Johnson , single work poetry (p. 72)
Lost Waxi"I’m gluing together a tiny violin; its edges melting with the touch of a lit", Shey Marque , single work poetry (p. 73)
On the Death of Astronaut John Youngi"My family didn’t own a colour TV set until two years", B. R. Dionysius , single work poetry (p. 74-75)
Trousersi"Two mildly pressed tubes have been constructed of closewoven fabric,", Chris Wallace-Crabbe , single work poetry (p. 76)
The True Tail, Donna Mazza , single work short story (p. 77-85)
We Arei"We are the past with our ancestors", Lola McDowell , single work poetry (p. 86)
Balginjirr, ‘A Special Place on Our Home River Country’!, Anne Poelina , single work poetry (p. 87-90)
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