Archive
J.M. Coetzee And The Ethics Of Reading: Literature in the event by Derek Attridge
For there is always going on within us a process of formulation and interpretation whose subject matter is our own selves.
These words appear towards the end of Erich Auerbach’s study of representation in Western literature, Mimesis. First published in 1946, the book has become a classic of twentieth-century literary criticism, but is almost as famous for the circumstances under which it was composed as for its content. It was written between 1942 and 1945 in Istanbul, where Auerbach, a German Jew, was living in exile.
... (read more)Blood, Sweat and Tears: Australia’s WWII remembered by the men and women who lived it by Margaret Geddes
The Book of Beginnings: A miscellany of the origins of superstitions, customs, phrases and sayings by R and L Brasch
The Best Australian Science Fiction Writing: A fifty-year collection edited by Rob Gerrand
Reorganising Power in Indonesia: The politics of oligarchy in an age of markets by Richard Robison and Vedi R. Hadiz
And the winner is …
Stephen Edgar has won the inaugural ABR Poetry Prize with his poem ‘Man on the Moon’. The three judges, Morag Fraser, Peter Rose and Peter Steele, were impressed by the overall quality of the entries and were pleased to be able to choose from such a strong short list, but the final decision was quick and unanimous because of the formal and imaginative qualities of Stephen Edgar’s poem. He receives $2000, and ‘Man on the Moon’ reappears on page 13. Elsewhere in the magazine, we publish the two poems that received honourable mentions (by Judith Bishop and Lisa Gorton). ABR also apologises to Mark Tredinnick, and our readers, for the ludicrous break that somehow infiltrated his villanelle ‘Ubirr Rock’, which we published with the other short-listed works in the previous issue.
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