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What Is Australia For?
Thursday 17 May, 10am
Join Frank Moorhouse, Nick Bryant and Robyn Archer as they sketch out visionary ideas for the future, uncover neglected stories from the past and celebrate a national identity that is both pragmatic and visionary ...MORE

Journals: From Little Things Big Things Grow
Thursday 17 May, 1.45pm
Journal editors Julianne Schultz (Griffith Review), Jane Gleeson-White (Overland), David Brooks (Southerly) and Alice Grundy (Seizure) discuss the vital role journals play in publishing emerging writers ...MORE

Surviving: The Australian Way
Sunday 20 May, 1pm
Tom Griffiths, Kim Mahood and Geoff Page tell Julianne Schultz about the role of historians, writers and poets in capturing tales of renewal and hope to help us survive natural and human disasters ...MORE

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Griffith REVIEW
Founding Patron

Griffith REVIEW is pleased to acknowledge the support of Founding Patron Margaret Mittelheuser, who has generously supported Griffith REVIEW since 2008.

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Edition 36: What is Australia For?

open_quote.jpgAustralia is no longer small, remote or isolated.
It's time to discover What is Australia For?, as well as acknowledge the wealth of resources beyond mining and ask the big questions to encourage a robust national discussion about a new Australian identity that reflects our national, regional and global roles
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close_quote.jpg

 


Edition 36 cover

 

In a powerful memoir, Frank Moorhouse confronts his own mortality when a routine trek through the bush at the back of Bourke takes a wrong turn; Cameron Muir argues for an urgent marriage between health and agriculture;
David Hansen investigates the token Aboriginality of a Melbourne residential tower; and Nick Bryant takes the temperature of our cultural cringe.

Dennis Altman asks if Australians have lost the will to create a better society;
Robyn Archer
contends that sustainability and resilience must be at the heart of our national debate; Kim Mahood offers a lacerating account of white workers in remote Aboriginal communities; David Astle and Romy Ash deliver two outstanding pieces of short fiction.

Other contributors include: Peter Mares, Leah Kaminsky, Jim Davidson, Frances Guo, Bruce Pascoe, Maria Papas, Pat Hoffie, Charlie Ward, Michael Wesley and more.


>> Go to Edition 36: What is Australia For?





» Online Only articles from Edition 36
Elizabeth Bryer
Elizabeth Bryer
has a sense of déjà vu in
Red Dog

Lois Calvert
Lois Calvert
writes on how the past helps paint our future
in Digging for yams

evans_raymond_col_64x79.jpg
Raymond Evans
on families touched by war and
angels in disguise in A good war

John Kane
John Kane
takes a South-East Queensland point of view in
On being Australian

Ellie Rennie
Ellie Rennie
writes of something special in the north-west in
Diamonds, pearls and Kimberley girls

Jorge Sotirios
Jorge Sotirios
on a cricket legend, neglected heroes and the
stigma of race in A good sport




 
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Digital Editions

Single purchase Digital Editions and Digital Editions Subscriptions are available now.

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Edition 37 cover

Small World will explore the way we travel now – whether it's exploring wild, dangerous or weird places, or travelling not as passive tourists but by engaging. This edition will also consider how technology – from planes and television to social media and international banking – has changed our sense of the world.

>> Read more on
Edition 37: Small World


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