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Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Generation Covid : Crafting History and Collective Memory
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'APRIL IS MY favourite time of year in Melbourne. The weather is comparatively stable and the days warm, richly complementing the autumn colours. In 2020 there was even more time to enjoy them than usual, and the late summer rains seemed to have deepened the autumn hues. Or perhaps the unfolding pandemic sharpened my vision. The skies were clear, absent of planes and the usual April smog, and the sounds of nature were no longer buried by the constant cacophony of industrialised cities. As I took the opportunity to breathe and look up, the rapid unravelling of the world as I knew it created its own kind of vertigo.' (Introduction)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Griffith Review Remaking the Balance no. 71 January 2021 21045017 2021 periodical issue

    'As the world teeters between old and new ways of doing, can we remake the balance between what we need and what we nurture? Can we forge a new equilibrium to sustain us into the twenty-first century?

    'Having challenged so much – social practices and social structures, habits of mind and habits of leisure – will the pandemic leave a lasting legacy on how we shape the world? Griffith Review 71: Remaking the Balance examines how our natural, economic and cultural systems might be refashioned post-pandemic: will it be a return to business as usual, or can we reinvent our relationship with all that is animal, vegetable and mineral to create a more sustainable future?

    'Edited by Ashley HayRemaking the Balance looks at how we can do more with what we have, and features leading writers and thinkers, including Gabrielle ChanClare WrightMatthew EvansSophie CunninghamInga SimpsonJohn Kinsella,  Declan Fry, plus and exclusive Q&A with Barbara Kingsolver.' (Publication summary)

    2021
Last amended 2 Feb 2021 12:47:26
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