AustLit
Issue Details:
First known date:
1944...
no.
[7]
December
1944
of
Angry Penguins
est. 1940-1943
Angry Penguins
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Notes
-
Contents indexed selectively.
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This issue also includes poetry from overseas contributors.
Also included are artwork, critical articles on overseas poets and poetry, sections on sociology, art, music and theatre and translations of works by overseas writers.
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Editor's note published in Angry Penguins no.8:
In the last issue of Angry Penguins [i.e. no.7] poems were wrongly attritbuted. 'Renaissance' by Jan Brevet was attributed to Nicholas Moore, and 'Ambush' by William van O'Connor was attributed to Jan Brevet. A stanza by Barry Reid was misplaced. We apologize to them for the editorial inaccuracies which occurred in presenting the poems. (p.163)
Contents
* Contents derived from the 1944 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
-
Editorial,
single work
column
Includes a comment on criticisms about the Ern Malley hoax that were published in the Communist newspapers The Tribune and The Guardian by George Farwell and Noel Counihan. Angry Penguins' editors replied to the criticisms, but the replies were not published.
- A Cable and Letter, single work correspondence (p. 5)
- The Poet and the Puritan, single work criticism (p. 6-8)
-
The Case of Ern Malley,
single work
criticism
Chisholm contends that some of the Ern Malley collection 'really is poetry', and that McAuley and Stewart 'lapsed into poetry more often than they intended'.
- Ern (Jig Saw) Malley, single work column (p. 9-10)
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The Merit or the Lack of It,
single work
column
Elliott contends that 'in this one work of malicious deception the authors, McAuley and Stewart, have written more forcefully and more to the purpose than they have ever done before'.
- Untitled, single work correspondence (p. 11-12)
- Untitled, single work correspondence (p. 11-12)
- Untitled, single work correspondence (p. 12)
- Clear the Air, single work column (p. 13)
- Hue and Cry, Janet Neild , Clive Neild , single work column (p. 14)
- Ern Malley Cause Celebre, single work column (p. 14)
- All Who Run May Read, single work criticism (p. 14-15)
- High Heaven, single work column (p. 15)
- The Anopheles, single work column (p. 16)
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The Cloud-Foot Unwary,
single work
column
Green suggests that the editors of Angry Penguins, while not lacking in courage, were lacking in responsibility when they published the Ern Malley poems. She concludes that 'No-one is ever safe from making a false judgement, and it is better to demonstrate one's cultivation to art by admitting that one has made a mistake, than to defend bad art in order to save one's dignity.'
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Spring Cleaning,
single work
column
Cumpston asserts that 'The Ern Malley poems make as much sense as some published examples of [McAuley's and Stewart's] ever did.'
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Ego,
single work
correspondence
Campbell unfavourably critiques Max Harris's judgement in accepting the Ern Malley poems for publication.
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Moustache on the Mona Lisa,
single work
criticism
Roskolenko and Lambert briefly critique each of the Ern Malley poems.
- Delirium, single work short story (p. 27-28)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 5 Mar 2008 16:36:30
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