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Latest Issues
Contents
* Contents derived from the 2014 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
-
Changing the Nation : Making Creative Australia in Canberra,
single work
criticism
'Helen O’Neil examines the conception, implementation and results of The National Cultural Policy'Note: December 2013
- The Considerable Responsibility of Preserving the Legacy of First, single work prose (p. 6-9) Section: Perspectives
- The Ice Was all Between, single work prose (p. 9-12)
- Glamarama, single work prose (p. 13-15) Section: Perspectives
- Crimes Against the Book, single work essay (p. 15-17)
- Buffaloi"A daark gale hollers slaughter.", single work poetry (p. 18)
-
Encountering the Black Screen,
single work
essay
'Rebecca Harkins-Cross explores contemporary video art by Indigenous artists'
- Only a Peonyi"Peony, Chinese rose, history taught me about you", single work poetry (p. 34-35)
- On Quitting Poetry, single work essay (p. 36-46)
- Pequodi"Charged electrically but darkly:", single work poetry (p. 47)
- The Future That Never Took Place : Exploring Detroit's Abandoned Buildings, single work prose (p. 48-62)
-
The Strangeness of the Dance : Kate Grenville, Rohan Wilson, Inga Clendinnen and Kim Scott,
single work
criticism
'Alison Ravenscroft on the strange forms Indigenous history has taken in recent Australian fiction.'
- Reading for Lifei"Mornings over coffee and delectable Whisk & Pin", single work poetry (p. 74-75)
- The Souvenir Genre, single work essay (p. 76-84)
- Near Tarrawarra Monasteryi"Autumn ended with the apple trees", single work poetry (p. 85)
- Desert Whales and a Fishing Village, single work prose (p. 86-93)
-
The Eye in the Sand ; On Creative Remoteness,
single work
prose
'Inspired by a curious discovery, Rebecca Giggs considers all things blue.'
- A Later Pagei"i didn't have an existential moment", single work poetry (p. 102-103)
- Fire Songi"Their song is sung in a makeshift bar", single work poetry (p. 114)
-
In Season,
single work
short story
'Summer
'February was hot. Old ladies expired by the dozen in Adelaide flats. All the fire warning signs were wrenched into the red zone but heading south-west out of Sydney the air was salty with illicit barbecue. The man at the Kilmore Caltex joked that I was driving into an inferno but I was only inner weather then and thought I knew hell better—though really worse—than Dante.' (Introduction)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 22 Oct 2014 13:24:30
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