Archive
War Is Not the Season for Figs by Lidija Cvetkovic & Modewarre by Patricia Sykes
Frontier Justice: A History of the Gulf Country to 1900 by Tony Roberts
Steadfast Knight: A life of Sir Hal Colebatch by Hal G. P. Colebatch
Don't Worry About Me edited by Robyn Arvier & Hellfire by Cameron Forbes
Fold out evenings, chairs in the street.
‘See Iridium?’ Making out the satellite pantheon:
efficient gods that do return our prayers
(small voices cast across our desert spaces)
like stars —
like Clint Eastwood
riding impassive
through our networks of desire.
... (read more)H2O edited by Margaret Hamilton & And the Roo Jumped Over the Moon edited by Robin Morrow, illustrated by Stephen Michael King
The combatants in the so-called ‘History Wars’ have been denouncing each other for about a decade. The main issue is the handling of black–white relations in histories of Australia. There are tangential disputes about the policies of the National Museum and the worth of the historian Manning Clark and his writings, but these are not germane to this article. On the left, television historians, journalists and politicians are concerned to levy blame for terrible acts of European greed and brutality and to bestow praise for acts of Aboriginal resistance; while rightists emphasise the white settlers’ and authorities’ normally good intentions and the small amount of blood shed by comparison with the histories of North and South America, and of Africa. The leading protagonists in both camps have generally been formed by Marxism and retain that absolutist faith that nothing happens by accident, thereby permitting simple assignments of good and evil.
... (read more)