Edition 39: TASMANIA - The Tipping Point?

Edited by JULIANNE SCHULTZ & NATASHA CICA
For many Tasmanians a darker reality lies behind the seductive tourism brochures showcasing the state’s pristine wilderness, gourmet magazine articles celebrating its burgeoning food culture, and newspaper stories gasping at a world-leading art museum.
Tasmania ranks at or near the bottom among Australian states on virtually every indicator of socio-economic performance – including levels of employment, income, investment, education and health.
Where does Tasmania’s future lie? Has Tasmania reached a ‘tipping point’, politically, economically and culturally?
In TASMANIA – The Tipping Point? Griffith REVIEW serves up strategic slices of Tasmania’s past, present and future.
Thinkers, writers and doers from Tasmania and beyond, including members of its extensive diaspora, challenge how Tasmania is seen by outsiders and illuminate how Tasmanians see themselves, down home and in the wider world.
Natasha Cica asks does Tasmania need an intervention?; Peter Timms writes of Lady Franklin’s heirs and successors; Jonathan West asks what’s wrong with Tasmania, really?; Cassandra Pybus on tin dragons and silver smoke screens; David Walsh with a story of humility and hubris from Glenorchy; Danielle Wood says you can check out any time you like; Jo Chandler tells how from little things, big things grow; Kathy Marks on surviving, belonging, challenging and enduring.
With more works from Rodney Croome, Will Bibby, Richard Eccleston, Lea McInerney, David Hansen, Greg Lehman, Luke Wright, Scott Rankin, Matthew Evans, Moya Fyfe, Fleur Fallon, Margaret Merrilees, Celia Lendis and Joanna Talberg with fiction from Favel Parrett, Romy Ash, Erin O’Dwyer and Matthew Lamb.
Featuring a striking picture gallery from Julie Gough titled 'Fugitive history'.
A collaboration between Griffith REVIEW
and the University of Tasmania
Contents
-
Introduction
( 1 )
- Oscillating wildly Julianne Schultz
-
Essay
( 13 )
- The cracks are how the light gets in Natasha Cica
- Assuming the mantle Peter Timms
- Churning the mud Rodney Croome
- Obstacles to progress Jonathan West
- The cost of hubris Will Bibby
- China in the Tasmanian imaginary Cassandra Pybus
- Canary in the mine Richard Eccleston
- More than two stories Lea McInerney
- A raid David Hansen
- Tasmanian gothic Greg Lehman
- The dancing man Luke Wright
- Tasmanian utopias Scott Rankin
- We need to talk about the northwest Matthew Evans
-
Memoir
( 7 )
- Reasons to be cheerful David Walsh
- When the apple cart tipped Moya Fyfe
- Censored conversations Fleur Fallon
- The digestion of history Margaret Merrilees
- Hotel Royale on Liverpool Danielle Wood
- Outside looking in Celia Lendis
- Stratus anxiety Joanna Talberg
-
Reportage
( 2 )
- The science laboratory Jo Chandler
- Channelling Mannalargenna Kathy Marks
-
Fiction
( 4 )
- Across the Bass Strait Favel Parrett
- Damming Romy Ash
- On Bruny Erin O’Dwyer
- Long grass over home Matthew Lamb
-
Online only
( 15 )
- The art of compromise Phil Bayley
- Putting gender back on the agenda Eleanor Ramsay
- Remote control Julian Barraclough
- Big thought and a small island Sophie Rigney
- Small city/Large town Helen Hayward
- The bridge Ben Walter
- Remembering 1939 Tadhg Muller
- Overcoming adolescence Peat Leith and Holger Meinke
- Why don't we know where we're going? Sue Kilpatrick
- Putting the science in the shed Aaron Smith
- Open for business? Elise Archer
- State of transformation David O'Byrne
- The island of broken dreams Greg Barns
- Firestorm at Bicheno Arabella Edge
- Eat the problem Kirsha Kaechele