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SUBMISSIONS
Submissions. Griffith Review is designed to foster and inform public debate and to provide a bridge between the expertise of specialists and the curiosity of readers. We wish to give writers the space to explore issues at greater length, with more time for reflection than is possible under the relentless pressure of daily events. STAFF - GRIFFITH REVIEW Staff. Professor Julianne Schultz AM FAHA is the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review and Professor of Media and Culture in of the Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research. She is a non executive director of The Conversation and chairs its Editorial Advisory Board. She is an acclaimed author of several booksSTATES OF MIND
Griffith Review · GR72 Introduction by Ashley Hay, editor. RRP: $27.99 / Publication Date: Apr 2021 / ISBN: 978-1-922212-59-7 / Extent: 264pp / Formats: Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook.DELUSIONS OF SANITY
Deconstructing madness in an insane world. by Samuel Alexander. ACCORDING TO THE Parable of the Poisoned Well, there once lived a king who ruled over a great city. He was loved for his wisdom and feared for his power. At the heart of the city was a well, the waters of which were clean and pure and from where the king and all theinhabitants drank.
ON 'CARPENTARIA', BY ALEXIS WRIGHT Carpentaria is an uncompromisingly ambitious tale of a town in crisis, and the tensions – escalating around the establishment of the mining site – between factions of its Indigenous population, and between the Indigenous people and the white folk of ‘Uptown’. Since 1770, when Captain James Cook claimed the east coast of the continent THE HEART OF SEEDING FIRST NATIONS SOVEREIGNTY THE ARCHITECTURE OF a society is shaped by structures that form the power to tell a nation’s story. And our capacity to create a narrative that respects First Nations sovereignty depends on the value we place on hearing the sacred voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in our quest for the truth of our giilangs – ourstories.
PARADISE LOST
The next morning the walking becomes tougher. After a six-month wet season the track has become wildly overgrown. Vines hang from the forest canopy, saplings sprout from the ground and the track disappears into a sea of green. Greg forges ahead and slashes throughclumps of
THE END OF ‘BIG MEN’ POLITICS The end of ‘big men’ politics. EARLY THIS YEAR I was approached by many young women, mothers, grandmothers, and those who work with them. At first I was nervous about what they may say: I knew I had stepped beyond what was expected of me in my Griffith REVIEW Edition 19 essay 'Trapped in the Aboriginal reality show'. TREE CHANGERS MOVING AND SHAKING Tree changers moving and shaking. by Lucy Mayes. IT IS 1.15 pm on a blistering Saturday in early 2003. I have missed the newsagents and will not be kept company by the Saturday Age this week. Heat from the footpath radiates up my skirt and sweat trickles and pools in uncomfortable places. I am thirty– five weeks pregnant with my firstchild.
HOME - GRIFFITH REVIEWABOUTCURRENT EDITIONEVENTSARCHIVESTOREEXCLUSIVE Griffith Review is delighted to announce five residencies in partnership with Varuna, The National Writers’ House, thanks to support from the Graeme Wood Foundation.. Contributors are invited to pitch projects to be considered for forthcoming editions of Griffith Review in 2022.. For details of what we're looking for, and how to apply, please see here.SUBMISSIONS
Submissions. Griffith Review is designed to foster and inform public debate and to provide a bridge between the expertise of specialists and the curiosity of readers. We wish to give writers the space to explore issues at greater length, with more time for reflection than is possible under the relentless pressure of daily events. STAFF - GRIFFITH REVIEW Staff. Professor Julianne Schultz AM FAHA is the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review and Professor of Media and Culture in of the Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research. She is a non executive director of The Conversation and chairs its Editorial Advisory Board. She is an acclaimed author of several booksSTATES OF MIND
Griffith Review · GR72 Introduction by Ashley Hay, editor. RRP: $27.99 / Publication Date: Apr 2021 / ISBN: 978-1-922212-59-7 / Extent: 264pp / Formats: Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook.DELUSIONS OF SANITY
Deconstructing madness in an insane world. by Samuel Alexander. ACCORDING TO THE Parable of the Poisoned Well, there once lived a king who ruled over a great city. He was loved for his wisdom and feared for his power. At the heart of the city was a well, the waters of which were clean and pure and from where the king and all theinhabitants drank.
ON 'CARPENTARIA', BY ALEXIS WRIGHT Carpentaria is an uncompromisingly ambitious tale of a town in crisis, and the tensions – escalating around the establishment of the mining site – between factions of its Indigenous population, and between the Indigenous people and the white folk of ‘Uptown’. Since 1770, when Captain James Cook claimed the east coast of the continent THE HEART OF SEEDING FIRST NATIONS SOVEREIGNTY THE ARCHITECTURE OF a society is shaped by structures that form the power to tell a nation’s story. And our capacity to create a narrative that respects First Nations sovereignty depends on the value we place on hearing the sacred voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in our quest for the truth of our giilangs – ourstories.
PARADISE LOST
The next morning the walking becomes tougher. After a six-month wet season the track has become wildly overgrown. Vines hang from the forest canopy, saplings sprout from the ground and the track disappears into a sea of green. Greg forges ahead and slashes throughclumps of
THE END OF ‘BIG MEN’ POLITICS The end of ‘big men’ politics. EARLY THIS YEAR I was approached by many young women, mothers, grandmothers, and those who work with them. At first I was nervous about what they may say: I knew I had stepped beyond what was expected of me in my Griffith REVIEW Edition 19 essay 'Trapped in the Aboriginal reality show'. TREE CHANGERS MOVING AND SHAKING Tree changers moving and shaking. by Lucy Mayes. IT IS 1.15 pm on a blistering Saturday in early 2003. I have missed the newsagents and will not be kept company by the Saturday Age this week. Heat from the footpath radiates up my skirt and sweat trickles and pools in uncomfortable places. I am thirty– five weeks pregnant with my firstchild.
STAFF - GRIFFITH REVIEW Staff. Professor Julianne Schultz AM FAHA is the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review and Professor of Media and Culture in of the Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research. She is a non executive director of The Conversation and chairs its Editorial Advisory Board. She is an acclaimed author of several booksTHE BEE BOX
The bee box. by Adam Smith. You made this; working with wood and mortar. to build nesting sites for native bees –. the leafcutter, the resin, the blue-banded. For some you drilled holes to size to suit. their tiny forms, for others experimented with mixtures.THREE POEMS
Think of their hands, all of them: firm on the plow, the cradle, the rifle butt, the razor strop; trembling on the telegram, the cheek of a lover, the fact of a door. Everything that can wreck a life. has been done before, done to you, even. BORN ON ABORIGINAL LAND Born on Aboriginal land. by Caitlin Prince. I was born a white woman on Aboriginal land. Blood drenched land, white washed in omission. The land still stains my feet. I WAS BORN on Whadjuk-Noongar land, not that I knew it. In 1985, our suburb in Perth – with its grid of streets named ‘Walter’ and ‘Edward’ and ever-browningA PREPOSTEROUS LIFE
SATIRE REACHES THE pinnacle of success when it becomes the thing being satirised. Such is the achievement of Kath & Kim, probably the most popular Australian television comedy ever produced.Its success has come at a price; as it has been thoroughly assimilated, if not bought off by, the society it lampoons so mercilessly. THE IDEOLOGY OF RELIGION The ideology of religion. Do evil in return. THE CAPACITY OF people to behave in ways that are incomprehensible to those who do not share the same beliefs and values is one of the abiding mysteries of human existence. What could motivate someone to fly a jet plane into a building in one of the most densely populated cities on earth; spend ON 'MAHTAB’S STORY', BY LIBBY GLEESON Mahtab’s Story (Allen & Unwin, 2008) helped to change that. Libby Gleeson’s novel provides a glimpse into the lives of those who arrive by boat, through the eyes of a young Afghani girl named Mahtab. Importantly, the novel also shows us that these people are so much more than just ‘boat people’ – a term used to flatten andde-identify
THE MYTHS OF AZARIA, SO MANY The myths of Azaria, so many. by John Bryson. A YOUNG TRIAL lawyer will soon come to understand that some stories are likely to be believed while others are not, and the factor which sets them apart is not to do with fact or with falsehood. Around a time when Lindy Chamberlain was well pregnant with Azaria, the chief ranger at AyersRock [sic
ANDREW BOLT’S DISAPPOINTMENT Andrew Bolt’s disappointment. MY FRIENDS TAKE a breath, lean across the table and assume the tone of Richard Dawkins explaining dinosaurs to intelligently designed Christians. They believe that in my promotion of Aboriginal achievement I'm simply being loyal to family or wanting to take a belligerent stance on our country's identity andhistory.
IN MY FATHER’S HOUSE In my father’s house. by Elisabeth Hanscombe. THERE WAS NO sign on the door of my parents' bedroom that said 'keep out', but I knew it was not a place to visit, at least not for long. There was a smell to the room, of stale perfume, my father's cigarettes and of bodies. Even so, I was drawn to this room, as if to danger, a wish to pit my puny HOME - GRIFFITH REVIEWABOUTCURRENT EDITIONEVENTSARCHIVESTOREEXCLUSIVE Griffith Review is delighted to announce five residencies in partnership with Varuna, The National Writers’ House, thanks to support from the Graeme Wood Foundation.. Contributors are invited to pitch projects to be considered for forthcoming editions of Griffith Review in 2022.. For details of what we're looking for, and how to apply, please see here. STAFF - GRIFFITH REVIEW Staff. Professor Julianne Schultz AM FAHA is the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review and Professor of Media and Culture in of the Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research. She is a non executive director of The Conversation and chairs its Editorial Advisory Board. She is an acclaimed author of several booksSTATES OF MIND
Griffith Review · GR72 Introduction by Ashley Hay, editor. RRP: $27.99 / Publication Date: Apr 2021 / ISBN: 978-1-922212-59-7 / Extent: 264pp / Formats: Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook.DELUSIONS OF SANITY
Deconstructing madness in an insane world. by Samuel Alexander. ACCORDING TO THE Parable of the Poisoned Well, there once lived a king who ruled over a great city. He was loved for his wisdom and feared for his power. At the heart of the city was a well, the waters of which were clean and pure and from where the king and all theinhabitants drank.
THE HEART OF SEEDING FIRST NATIONS SOVEREIGNTY THE ARCHITECTURE OF a society is shaped by structures that form the power to tell a nation’s story. And our capacity to create a narrative that respects First Nations sovereignty depends on the value we place on hearing the sacred voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in our quest for the truth of our giilangs – ourstories.
ON 'CARPENTARIA', BY ALEXIS WRIGHT Carpentaria is an uncompromisingly ambitious tale of a town in crisis, and the tensions – escalating around the establishment of the mining site – between factions of its Indigenous population, and between the Indigenous people and the white folk of ‘Uptown’. Since 1770, when Captain James Cook claimed the east coast of the continentPARADISE LOST
The next morning the walking becomes tougher. After a six-month wet season the track has become wildly overgrown. Vines hang from the forest canopy, saplings sprout from the ground and the track disappears into a sea of green. Greg forges ahead and slashes throughclumps of
BORN ON ABORIGINAL LAND Born on Aboriginal land. by Caitlin Prince. I was born a white woman on Aboriginal land. Blood drenched land, white washed in omission. The land still stains my feet. I WAS BORN on Whadjuk-Noongar land, not that I knew it. In 1985, our suburb in Perth – with its grid of streets named ‘Walter’ and ‘Edward’ and ever-browning THE MYTHS OF AZARIA, SO MANY The myths of Azaria, so many. by John Bryson. A YOUNG TRIAL lawyer will soon come to understand that some stories are likely to be believed while others are not, and the factor which sets them apart is not to do with fact or with falsehood. Around a time when Lindy Chamberlain was well pregnant with Azaria, the chief ranger at AyersRock [sic
TREE CHANGERS MOVING AND SHAKING Tree changers moving and shaking. by Lucy Mayes. IT IS 1.15 pm on a blistering Saturday in early 2003. I have missed the newsagents and will not be kept company by the Saturday Age this week. Heat from the footpath radiates up my skirt and sweat trickles and pools in uncomfortable places. I am thirty– five weeks pregnant with my firstchild.
HOME - GRIFFITH REVIEWABOUTCURRENT EDITIONEVENTSARCHIVESTOREEXCLUSIVE Griffith Review is delighted to announce five residencies in partnership with Varuna, The National Writers’ House, thanks to support from the Graeme Wood Foundation.. Contributors are invited to pitch projects to be considered for forthcoming editions of Griffith Review in 2022.. For details of what we're looking for, and how to apply, please see here. STAFF - GRIFFITH REVIEW Staff. Professor Julianne Schultz AM FAHA is the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review and Professor of Media and Culture in of the Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research. She is a non executive director of The Conversation and chairs its Editorial Advisory Board. She is an acclaimed author of several booksSTATES OF MIND
Griffith Review · GR72 Introduction by Ashley Hay, editor. RRP: $27.99 / Publication Date: Apr 2021 / ISBN: 978-1-922212-59-7 / Extent: 264pp / Formats: Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook.DELUSIONS OF SANITY
Deconstructing madness in an insane world. by Samuel Alexander. ACCORDING TO THE Parable of the Poisoned Well, there once lived a king who ruled over a great city. He was loved for his wisdom and feared for his power. At the heart of the city was a well, the waters of which were clean and pure and from where the king and all theinhabitants drank.
THE HEART OF SEEDING FIRST NATIONS SOVEREIGNTY THE ARCHITECTURE OF a society is shaped by structures that form the power to tell a nation’s story. And our capacity to create a narrative that respects First Nations sovereignty depends on the value we place on hearing the sacred voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in our quest for the truth of our giilangs – ourstories.
ON 'CARPENTARIA', BY ALEXIS WRIGHT Carpentaria is an uncompromisingly ambitious tale of a town in crisis, and the tensions – escalating around the establishment of the mining site – between factions of its Indigenous population, and between the Indigenous people and the white folk of ‘Uptown’. Since 1770, when Captain James Cook claimed the east coast of the continentPARADISE LOST
The next morning the walking becomes tougher. After a six-month wet season the track has become wildly overgrown. Vines hang from the forest canopy, saplings sprout from the ground and the track disappears into a sea of green. Greg forges ahead and slashes throughclumps of
BORN ON ABORIGINAL LAND Born on Aboriginal land. by Caitlin Prince. I was born a white woman on Aboriginal land. Blood drenched land, white washed in omission. The land still stains my feet. I WAS BORN on Whadjuk-Noongar land, not that I knew it. In 1985, our suburb in Perth – with its grid of streets named ‘Walter’ and ‘Edward’ and ever-browning THE MYTHS OF AZARIA, SO MANY The myths of Azaria, so many. by John Bryson. A YOUNG TRIAL lawyer will soon come to understand that some stories are likely to be believed while others are not, and the factor which sets them apart is not to do with fact or with falsehood. Around a time when Lindy Chamberlain was well pregnant with Azaria, the chief ranger at AyersRock [sic
TREE CHANGERS MOVING AND SHAKING Tree changers moving and shaking. by Lucy Mayes. IT IS 1.15 pm on a blistering Saturday in early 2003. I have missed the newsagents and will not be kept company by the Saturday Age this week. Heat from the footpath radiates up my skirt and sweat trickles and pools in uncomfortable places. I am thirty– five weeks pregnant with my firstchild.
THE BEE BOX
The bee box. by Adam Smith. You made this; working with wood and mortar. to build nesting sites for native bees –. the leafcutter, the resin, the blue-banded. For some you drilled holes to size to suit. their tiny forms, for others experimented with mixtures.THREE POEMS
Think of their hands, all of them: firm on the plow, the cradle, the rifle butt, the razor strop; trembling on the telegram, the cheek of a lover, the fact of a door. Everything that can wreck a life. has been done before, done to you, even. ON 'THE COMPLETE STORIES', BY DAVID MALOUF subscribe to Griffith Review for as little as $60 per year. THERE ARE ALWAYS two landscapes in a Malouf story. The one you can touch with your hands, and the one that is dreamed – discoverable by language, always on the verge of disappearing. In medieval Japanese art and letters, this quality was known as yūgen (幽玄),which might be ON 'THE WHITE EARTH', BY ANDREW MCGAHAN But as Andrew McGahan’s extraordinary novel The White Earth (Allen & Unwin, 2004) reveals, some blights on the national conscience can never be scorched clean. The first breathtaking pages of The White Earth describe a fire tearing through wheat fields. This is the first of many fires, and as the novel progresses it is this particularelement
BORN ON ABORIGINAL LAND Born on Aboriginal land. by Caitlin Prince. I was born a white woman on Aboriginal land. Blood drenched land, white washed in omission. The land still stains my feet. I WAS BORN on Whadjuk-Noongar land, not that I knew it. In 1985, our suburb in Perth – with its grid of streets named ‘Walter’ and ‘Edward’ and ever-browning THE IDEOLOGY OF RELIGION The ideology of religion. Do evil in return. THE CAPACITY OF people to behave in ways that are incomprehensible to those who do not share the same beliefs and values is one of the abiding mysteries of human existence. What could motivate someone to fly a jet plane into a building in one of the most densely populated cities on earth; spend ON 'MAHTAB’S STORY', BY LIBBY GLEESON Mahtab’s Story (Allen & Unwin, 2008) helped to change that. Libby Gleeson’s novel provides a glimpse into the lives of those who arrive by boat, through the eyes of a young Afghani girl named Mahtab. Importantly, the novel also shows us that these people are so much more than just ‘boat people’ – a term used to flatten andde-identify
THE END OF ‘BIG MEN’ POLITICS The end of ‘big men’ politics. EARLY THIS YEAR I was approached by many young women, mothers, grandmothers, and those who work with them. At first I was nervous about what they may say: I knew I had stepped beyond what was expected of me in my Griffith REVIEW Edition 19 essay 'Trapped in the Aboriginal reality show'.THE OLDEN DAYS
In the olden days, sex was a commodity but the trade was deniable, and furtive, and slightly nasty. Despite the obvious existence of a small but thriving red-light district in Fortitude Valley, the governing brutocracy refused to admit such things could even happen, while corrupt police officers trousered thousands of dollars a week inbribes
IN MY FATHER’S HOUSE In my father’s house. by Elisabeth Hanscombe. THERE WAS NO sign on the door of my parents' bedroom that said 'keep out', but I knew it was not a place to visit, at least not for long. There was a smell to the room, of stale perfume, my father's cigarettes and of bodies. Even so, I was drawn to this room, as if to danger, a wish to pit my puny0
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THROUGH THE WINDOW:
COMMUNITY CONTROL
------------------------- _The pandemic’s ghastly presence is one among many sources of fear in Afghanistan, and a virus will thrive in a culture of fear, competition and suspicion. I am struck (not for the first time) by this country’s apparent commonalities with the United States – the prevalence of violence, mistrust, anger and misinformation. _ In the final instalment of our series examining the kaleidoscopic impacts of this year of the pandemic, Rachel Maher reflects on shared experiences across apparent divides. Read the piece in full here. GENEROSITIES OF SPIRIT – THE NOVELLA PROJECT VIII ------------------------- Stories of inner lives, resilience and potential realised, _Generosities of Spirit _presents _Griffith Review_'s annual showcase of the best of Australian new writing.
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THE ELEMENTAL SUMMER ------------------------- Griffith Review's new print and online series, The Elemental Summer, follows our
unfolding climate emergency. Featuring essays by some of Australia's leading thinkers on climate, including James Bradley, Rebecca Giggs, Bruce Pascoe, Joëlle Gergis and Tyson Yunkaporta. SUBMISSIONS NOW OPEN – GRIFFITH REVIEW 72: STATES OF MIND ------------------------- Ask yourself this: What state am I in? And how much is it a reaction to the state of the world today? Submissions are now open for _Griffith Review 72: States of Mind_.Find out more here
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via Submittable by 14 December 2020.
A DREAM THAT CANNOT BE DENIED ------------------------- In October 2017 the federal government rejected proposals for a Voice to Parliament called for in the Uluru Statement from the Heart. Here, to mark the third anniversary of that rejection, Thomas Mayor, a stalwart champion of its cause, uncovers the deep roots of Aboriginal protest and resistancethat
fed into the Statement as he traces the long walk to Freedom Day.THROUGH THE WINDOW:
COMMUNITY CONTROL
------------------------- _The pandemic’s ghastly presence is one among many sources of fear in Afghanistan, and a virus will thrive in a culture of fear, competition and suspicion. I am struck (not for the first time) by this country’s apparent commonalities with the United States – the prevalence of violence, mistrust, anger and misinformation. _ In the final instalment of our series examining the kaleidoscopic impacts of this year of the pandemic, Rachel Maher reflects on shared experiences across apparent divides. Read the piece in full here. GENEROSITIES OF SPIRIT – THE NOVELLA PROJECT VIII ------------------------- Stories of inner lives, resilience and potential realised, _Generosities of Spirit _presents _Griffith Review_'s annual showcase of the best of Australian new writing.
Purchase
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Leaving Coonabarabran By Susan Harris Rimmer COONABARABRAN, A SMALL country town in Central West New South Wales, is much like many other small Australian towns: 3,000 close-knit souls and a big sandstone clock tower in the main street that’s also the war memorial. All directions reference th...*
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IN MY TWENTIES and thirties I spent as much time as I could in the waves off Sydney’s beaches. Having come to surfin...*
All our landscapes are brokenBy Tyson Yunkaporta
IN THE WINTER of 2020 there was a fair bit going on, so not many people noticed what was happening with the whales in the far north of Australia. But Elders noted the unusual behaviour – the whales swam inland along freshwater rivers – and contac...CURRENT EDITION
EDITION 70 Generosities of Spirit – The Novella Project VIII Griffith Review's annual showcase presents the best in Australian new writing, both fiction and non-fiction.NEXT EDITION
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