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THE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US.SHIFTING GROUND
Those Indigenous writers by my bedside are trapped in a conversation with whiteness. They answer back to white people; they talk about white people. Whiteness matters far more than it should, but it is unavoidable. These black writers are what remains after invasion – stolen land, stolen people, stolen language – so they write about recovery: their words, their culture, their family. ‘BUILDING FOR HOPE’ BY MARWA AL-SABOUNI Marwa al-Sabouni is a young architect and writer with an arresting story to tell. Her debut memoir, The Battle for Home: The Vision of a Young Architect in Syria, describes life under bombardment in her home city of Homs. Since its 2016 publication she has toured the book internationally and is often asked to propose how war-torn citiesmight be rebuilt.
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the health THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
ANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
AT EIGHTY | THE MONTHLY At eighty. Forty years of friendship. By Murray Bail. May 2014. During the days before the celebration I looked back to when I first met D. in Sydney. I had been away from Australia for six years, and returned in 1974. I had never lived in Sydney, but then so many Sydney people, I soon realised, were arrivals from all parts of the country andTHE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US.SHIFTING GROUND
Those Indigenous writers by my bedside are trapped in a conversation with whiteness. They answer back to white people; they talk about white people. Whiteness matters far more than it should, but it is unavoidable. These black writers are what remains after invasion – stolen land, stolen people, stolen language – so they write about recovery: their words, their culture, their family. ‘BUILDING FOR HOPE’ BY MARWA AL-SABOUNI Marwa al-Sabouni is a young architect and writer with an arresting story to tell. Her debut memoir, The Battle for Home: The Vision of a Young Architect in Syria, describes life under bombardment in her home city of Homs. Since its 2016 publication she has toured the book internationally and is often asked to propose how war-torn citiesmight be rebuilt.
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the health THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
ANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
AT EIGHTY | THE MONTHLY At eighty. Forty years of friendship. By Murray Bail. May 2014. During the days before the celebration I looked back to when I first met D. in Sydney. I had been away from Australia for six years, and returned in 1974. I had never lived in Sydney, but then so many Sydney people, I soon realised, were arrivals from all parts of the country and ON LOOP: BO BURNHAM’S ‘INSIDE’ 1 day ago · Watching Bo Burnham’s new Netflix special during Melbourne’s fourth lockdown is an eerie experience. The comedian wrote, filmed, edited and produced the show over a pandemic year, and for just under an hour and a half, he unravels in real time for an invisible audience, mostly in one room of his house. The madness is plain to see as his appearance becomes rougher and his eyes moremanic; a
TRIPLE ZERO
1 day ago · The eastern side of the country is breathing a frosty sigh of relief, as all three of the states currently on high alert recorded zero locally acquired cases of COVID-19, meaning Australia has recorded its first “donut day” in a number of weeks. Concerns remain, however, over the infected Victorian couple who entered Queensland without a permit, with chief health officers in the northand
HOLDING THE LINE
“If political impact is measured by how hard your opponents go after you, McManus made one of the bigger entrances to public life. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull christened her ‘Sally McManarchist’ in Question Time, and Christopher Pyne labelled her 7.30 comments ‘anarcho-Marxist claptrap’. Columnists solemnly declared the interview to be a disastrous start to her tenure. IT’S TEXTBOOK ‘HOW NOT TO RUN A WAR’ After 20 years of war, Australia gave three days’ notice before closing its embassy in Kabul. The dramatic end expresses how unsafe Afghanistan still is and how little the conflict achieved. But the decision also leaves hundreds of local staff vulnerable to retaliation by the Taliban. Guest: Chief political correspondent for The Saturday Paper Karen Middleton. TAKING SIDES OVER ‘DARK EMU’ Dark Emu appeared in bookshops in March 2014 much as most books do: with a brief publicity campaign arranged by its publisher. Bruce Pascoe was already something of a public figure – as well as publishing a short fiction journal during the 1980s, he’d written a number of novels and a well-received history of Australia’s frontier wars, Convincing Ground (2007) – and he is a wonderful AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST EVER CRIME STING This week, Scott Morrison announced Australia’s involvement in a massive organised crime sting coordinated by the FBI. He pushed for greater security powers, but some observers believe what he really wants is a distraction from bad news and poor polling. IS IT REALLY WORTH IT? “The thing that struck me most was the concept of climate justice. The people who have done the least to cause the climate crisis, largely those in developing countries, will be worst affected by it, and will be the least equipped to deal with it.MEDISCARE-MONGERING
Australian Medical Association president Dr Omar Khorshid. Image via ABC News Jo Dyer, a friend of Christian Porter’s accuser, has vowed to keep telling her friend’s story until there’s an inquiry, and promises to accept the outcome if a proper investigation is held. “It wasn’t grassy HOW WESTERN SYDNEY IS REDEFINING HIP-HOP Hip-hop is the biggest musical genre in the world right now, and one of the fastest growing locally, but in Australia it still feels like it hasn’t quite broken through and dominated the mainstream yet, in the way it has overseas - especially in the US and UK. THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
THE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US.SHIFTING GROUND
Those Indigenous writers by my bedside are trapped in a conversation with whiteness. They answer back to white people; they talk about white people. Whiteness matters far more than it should, but it is unavoidable. These black writers are what remains after invasion – stolen land, stolen people, stolen language – so they write about recovery: their words, their culture, their family. ‘BUILDING FOR HOPE’ BY MARWA AL-SABOUNI Marwa al-Sabouni is a young architect and writer with an arresting story to tell. Her debut memoir, The Battle for Home: The Vision of a Young Architect in Syria, describes life under bombardment in her home city of Homs. Since its 2016 publication she has toured the book internationally and is often asked to propose how war-torn citiesmight be rebuilt.
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the health THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
ANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
AT EIGHTY | THE MONTHLY At eighty. Forty years of friendship. By Murray Bail. May 2014. During the days before the celebration I looked back to when I first met D. in Sydney. I had been away from Australia for six years, and returned in 1974. I had never lived in Sydney, but then so many Sydney people, I soon realised, were arrivals from all parts of the country andTHE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US.SHIFTING GROUND
Those Indigenous writers by my bedside are trapped in a conversation with whiteness. They answer back to white people; they talk about white people. Whiteness matters far more than it should, but it is unavoidable. These black writers are what remains after invasion – stolen land, stolen people, stolen language – so they write about recovery: their words, their culture, their family. ‘BUILDING FOR HOPE’ BY MARWA AL-SABOUNI Marwa al-Sabouni is a young architect and writer with an arresting story to tell. Her debut memoir, The Battle for Home: The Vision of a Young Architect in Syria, describes life under bombardment in her home city of Homs. Since its 2016 publication she has toured the book internationally and is often asked to propose how war-torn citiesmight be rebuilt.
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the health THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
ANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
AT EIGHTY | THE MONTHLY At eighty. Forty years of friendship. By Murray Bail. May 2014. During the days before the celebration I looked back to when I first met D. in Sydney. I had been away from Australia for six years, and returned in 1974. I had never lived in Sydney, but then so many Sydney people, I soon realised, were arrivals from all parts of the country and ON LOOP: BO BURNHAM’S ‘INSIDE’ 1 day ago · Watching Bo Burnham’s new Netflix special during Melbourne’s fourth lockdown is an eerie experience. The comedian wrote, filmed, edited and produced the show over a pandemic year, and for just under an hour and a half, he unravels in real time for an invisible audience, mostly in one room of his house. The madness is plain to see as his appearance becomes rougher and his eyes moremanic; a
TRIPLE ZERO
18 hours ago · The eastern side of the country is breathing a frosty sigh of relief, as all three of the states currently on high alert recorded zero locally acquired cases of COVID-19, meaning Australia has recorded its first “donut day” in a number of weeks. Concerns remain, however, over the infected Victorian couple who entered Queensland without a permit, with chief health officers in the northand
HOLDING THE LINE
1 day ago · “If political impact is measured by how hard your opponents go after you, McManus made one of the bigger entrances to public life. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull christened her ‘Sally McManarchist’ in Question Time, and Christopher Pyne labelled her 7.30 comments ‘anarcho-Marxist claptrap’. Columnists solemnly declared the interview to be a disastrous start to hertenure.
IT’S TEXTBOOK ‘HOW NOT TO RUN A WAR’ After 20 years of war, Australia gave three days’ notice before closing its embassy in Kabul. The dramatic end expresses how unsafe Afghanistan still is and how little the conflict achieved. But the decision also leaves hundreds of local staff vulnerable to retaliation by the Taliban. Guest: Chief political correspondent for The Saturday Paper Karen Middleton. AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST EVER CRIME STING This week, Scott Morrison announced Australia’s involvement in a massive organised crime sting coordinated by the FBI. He pushed for greater security powers, but some observers believe what he really wants is a distraction from bad news and poor polling. TAKING SIDES OVER ‘DARK EMU’ Dark Emu appeared in bookshops in March 2014 much as most books do: with a brief publicity campaign arranged by its publisher. Bruce Pascoe was already something of a public figure – as well as publishing a short fiction journal during the 1980s, he’d written a number of novels and a well-received history of Australia’s frontier wars, Convincing Ground (2007) – and he is a wonderful IS IT REALLY WORTH IT? “The thing that struck me most was the concept of climate justice. The people who have done the least to cause the climate crisis, largely those in developing countries, will be worst affected by it, and will be the least equipped to deal with it.MEDISCARE-MONGERING
Australian Medical Association president Dr Omar Khorshid. Image via ABC News Jo Dyer, a friend of Christian Porter’s accuser, has vowed to keep telling her friend’s story until there’s an inquiry, and promises to accept the outcome if a proper investigation is held. “It wasn’t grassy HOW WESTERN SYDNEY IS REDEFINING HIP-HOP Hip-hop is the biggest musical genre in the world right now, and one of the fastest growing locally, but in Australia it still feels like it hasn’t quite broken through and dominated the mainstream yet, in the way it has overseas - especially in the US and UK.DREAMING OF BILOELA
Any prospect of thinking through the problem posed to Australia by refugees, I suspect, became impossible many years ago. This week, we’re confronted with the latest of thousands of tragedies: three-year-old Tharnicaa Murugappan, apparently with sepsis caused by untreated pneumonia, medically evacuated from Christmas Island, where she’s been living with her parents and older sisterTHE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US. THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the healthANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
REALITY IS IRREVERSIBLE The moment they light up the coal in the furnace is the moment high-grade chemical energy begins its cascade into low-grade waste-heat, never to return. “Reality is irreversible,” as Russian biophysicist Mikhail Volkenstein put it. It is in the dissipation that everything interesting happens. THE BIN FIRE OF THE HUMANITIES: CASUALISATION AND I couldn’t wait to start university. Over the summer of 1967 I read and re-read the arts faculty handbook for the University of Melbourne, trying to decide my subjects. I did the suggested preliminary reading for Modern Government A, began reading the novels for English I, and even covered my books, just as I had at the start of every schoolyear.
ROBOT LOVE: IAN MCEWAN’S ‘MACHINES LIKE ME’ AND JEANETTE In the past if you wanted to read a story peppered with robot characters you’d head for the science-fiction section. But somewhere along the line apocalypse-threatening robots started invading literary fiction. In February this year, The New Yorker published a story by T. Coraghessan Boyle, “Asleep at the Wheel”, featuring an AI-powered car named Carly that starts dictating how its ownerTHE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism andWILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US. THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
TASMANIA’S TOXIC SECRET: THE ROTTING UNDERBELLY OF THE Christine Coughanowr is a gently spoken woman of large achievement. An estuarine scientist, she started and led for twenty years a remarkable program to clean up pollution and restore marine life in Hobart’s magnificent Derwent Estuary. Known as the Derwent Estuary Program (DEP), it secured support from all levels of government and private industry to measure and improve the healthANDREW QUILTY
Andrew Quilty. Andrew Quilty has been based in Kabul, Afghanistan, since 2013, working as a photojournalist, and winning seven Walkley Awards, including the Gold Walkley in 2016, as well as Polk and World Press Photo awards. By this author. April 1, 2021. The worst form of defence. Society. New revelations of Australian war crimes inAfghanistan.
REALITY IS IRREVERSIBLE The moment they light up the coal in the furnace is the moment high-grade chemical energy begins its cascade into low-grade waste-heat, never to return. “Reality is irreversible,” as Russian biophysicist Mikhail Volkenstein put it. It is in the dissipation that everything interesting happens. THE BIN FIRE OF THE HUMANITIES: CASUALISATION AND I couldn’t wait to start university. Over the summer of 1967 I read and re-read the arts faculty handbook for the University of Melbourne, trying to decide my subjects. I did the suggested preliminary reading for Modern Government A, began reading the novels for English I, and even covered my books, just as I had at the start of every schoolyear.
ROBOT LOVE: IAN MCEWAN’S ‘MACHINES LIKE ME’ AND JEANETTE In the past if you wanted to read a story peppered with robot characters you’d head for the science-fiction section. But somewhere along the line apocalypse-threatening robots started invading literary fiction. In February this year, The New Yorker published a story by T. Coraghessan Boyle, “Asleep at the Wheel”, featuring an AI-powered car named Carly that starts dictating how its owner SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only) IS IT REALLY WORTH IT? 1 day ago · “The thing that struck me most was the concept of climate justice. The people who have done the least to cause the climate crisis, largely those in developing countries, will be worst affected by it, and will be the least equipped to deal with it.MEDISCARE-MONGERING
4 hours ago · Australian Medical Association president Dr Omar Khorshid. Image via ABC News Jo Dyer, a friend of Christian Porter’s accuser, has vowed to keep telling her friend’s story until there’s an inquiry, and promises to accept the outcome if a proper investigation is held. “It wasn’t grassy‘AT WAR’
Coalition senators have used a farcical Senate estimates hearing to attack the ABC, quizzing managing director David Anderson about a Four Corners investigation into the PM’s ties to a QAnon leader, Christian Porter’s defamation action, and ABC staff use of social media. Anderson revealed that the ABC will pay $100,000 in mediation costs to Porter’s team, with the legal stoush costing7AM | THE MONTHLY
7am is a daily show from The Monthly and The Saturday Paper. It’s produced by Ruby Schwartz, Elle Marsh, Atticus Bastow, Michelle Macklem, and Cinnamon Nippard.DREAMING OF BILOELA
6 hours ago · Any prospect of thinking through the problem posed to Australia by refugees, I suspect, became impossible many years ago. This week, we’re confronted with the latest of thousands of tragedies: three-year-old Tharnicaa Murugappan, apparently with sepsis caused by untreated pneumonia, medically evacuated from Christmas Island, where she’s been living with her parents and older sister WHY IT KEEPS HAPPENING TO VICTORIA Yesterday, Victorians were told the state’s seven day ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown would be extended for another week, as health authorities race to contain the latest Covid-19 outbreak. It’s the fourth lockdown in the state since the start of the pandemic, and now questions are being asked about why Victoria in particular seems so susceptible to the spread of the virus. THE AUSTRALIAN SPY NOVELIST CHARGED WITH ESPIONAGE IN Australian writer Yang Hengjun has been detained by the Chinese government since 2019. He’s been charged with espionage offences, but the exact nature of what he’s accused of has never been revealed. He’s now awaiting the verdict of a secret trial held a few weeks ago, with the death penalty one possibility.SHIFTING GROUND
Those Indigenous writers by my bedside are trapped in a conversation with whiteness. They answer back to white people; they talk about white people. Whiteness matters far more than it should, but it is unavoidable. These black writers are what remains after invasion – stolen land, stolen people, stolen language – so they write about recovery: their words, their culture, their family. HOW TO MAKE A LAW FOR CONSENT For years, advocates against sexual assault have been pushing for law reform, particularly on the of issue consent. Now - they’ve had a win, with the NSW Attorney General announcing sweeping changes, which go even further than what was recommended by an independent inquiry.THE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only)WILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US. SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism and THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
JOËLLE GERGIS
Joëlle Gergis is an award-winning climate scientist and writer based at the Australian National University. She is the author of S unburnt Country: The History and Future of Climate Change in Australia . By this author. July 1, 2020. Witnessing the unthinkable.SARAH KRASNOSTEIN
Sarah Krasnostein is a writer, lawyer and researcher with a doctorate in criminal law. She is the author of The Trauma Cleaner and The Believer . By this author. June 1, 2021. BEN QUILTY: THE ART OF UNEASE Ben Quilty: the art of unease. By Steve Dow. Ahead of a major survey at the Art Gallery of SA, the artist talks about the anxiety that informs his work. Ben Quilty. Photograph by Daniel Boud. If ever there was a transformative moment in the career of Ben Quilty, who made his name with art about young male risk-taking – getting into fights and A LAW THAT CANNOT BE ENFORCED A law that cannot be enforced. By Justin Clemens. The politics of art in Australia. Last year, in the mid-afternoon of 1 August, I snuck into the Melbourne Art Fair before it officially opened. I wanted to poke around, see what was going on and visit friends who were working there. A couple of guards were stationed on the main door, but I ROBOT LOVE: IAN MCEWAN’S ‘MACHINES LIKE ME’ AND JEANETTE In the past if you wanted to read a story peppered with robot characters you’d head for the science-fiction section. But somewhere along the line apocalypse-threatening robots started invading literary fiction. In February this year, The New Yorker published a story by T. Coraghessan Boyle, “Asleep at the Wheel”, featuring an AI-powered car named Carly that starts dictating how its ownerTHE MONTHLY
‘Secrets of Happiness’ by Joan Silber The American author’s Austenesque latest novel, a collage of short stories, traces the common pursuit of happiness through love and money By Helen Elliott ‘Building for Hope’ by Marwa al-Sabouni The Syrian architect and writer makes a case for war SCHWARTZ MEDIA ACCOUNT LOGIN If you're an existing print subscriber, and you have never logged in, you may need to activate your Schwartz Media account. Want some assistance? We're here to help. Email us at subscribe@schwartzmedia.com.au. Freecall 1800 077 514 (Australia only)WILL HIGGINBOTHAM
Will Higginbotham is a writer and researcher who has reported for Guardian Australia, Monocle and The New York Times, and for the BBC radio documentary division. By this author. June 1, 2021. Land of the free. Society. A group of Australian expats is helping Nauru and Manus refugees start new lives in the US. SOLE OF A NATION: THE UNTOLD ABORIGINAL HISTORY OF THE R.M The young man looks straight ahead, both eyes fixed on the camera even as his hands feed a piece of leather through the sewing machine. Daylight streams in between gaps in the corrugated iron and pinned animal skins around him, and at the front of his workbench sits a pair of elastic-sided leather boots. It’s a recognisable style that’s come to evoke the Australian outback, pastoralism and THE DEATH OF YOKUNUNNA: ‘RETURN TO ULURU’ The death of Yokununna: ‘Return to Uluru’. By Frank Bongiorno. Mark McKenna explores Australia’s history of violence, dispossession and deception through one tragic incident. In 1933, the geologist and explorer Cecil Madigan tried to identify the “centre” of Australia. It was a question that had long exercised explorers of theoutback
JOËLLE GERGIS
Joëlle Gergis is an award-winning climate scientist and writer based at the Australian National University. She is the author of S unburnt Country: The History and Future of Climate Change in Australia . By this author. July 1, 2020. Witnessing the unthinkable.SARAH KRASNOSTEIN
Sarah Krasnostein is a writer, lawyer and researcher with a doctorate in criminal law. She is the author of The Trauma Cleaner and The Believer . By this author. June 1, 2021. BEN QUILTY: THE ART OF UNEASE Ben Quilty: the art of unease. By Steve Dow. Ahead of a major survey at the Art Gallery of SA, the artist talks about the anxiety that informs his work. Ben Quilty. Photograph by Daniel Boud. If ever there was a transformative moment in the career of Ben Quilty, who made his name with art about young male risk-taking – getting into fights and A LAW THAT CANNOT BE ENFORCED A law that cannot be enforced. By Justin Clemens. The politics of art in Australia. Last year, in the mid-afternoon of 1 August, I snuck into the Melbourne Art Fair before it officially opened. I wanted to poke around, see what was going on and visit friends who were working there. A couple of guards were stationed on the main door, but I ROBOT LOVE: IAN MCEWAN’S ‘MACHINES LIKE ME’ AND JEANETTE In the past if you wanted to read a story peppered with robot characters you’d head for the science-fiction section. But somewhere along the line apocalypse-threatening robots started invading literary fiction. In February this year, The New Yorker published a story by T. Coraghessan Boyle, “Asleep at the Wheel”, featuring an AI-powered car named Carly that starts dictating how its owner MAGAZINES | THE MONTHLY Keep in touch. Stories from The Monthly delivered free to your inbox IS IT REALLY WORTH IT? 20 hours ago · “The thing that struck me most was the concept of climate justice. The people who have done the least to cause the climate crisis, largely those in developing countries, will be worst affected by it, and will be the least equipped to deal with it.‘AT WAR’
1 day ago · Coalition senators have used a farcical Senate estimates hearing to attack the ABC, quizzing managing director David Anderson about a Four Corners investigation into the PM’s ties to a QAnon leader, Christian Porter’s defamation action, and ABC staff use of social media. Anderson revealed that the ABC will pay $100,000 in mediation costs to Porter’s team, with the legal stoush costing SCOTT MORRISON DODGES RESPONSIBILITY For the past week the federal government has been locked in a tussle with Victoria over who is responsible for financially supporting those suffering the economic consequences of another lockdown. Scott Morrison and his ministers have tried to shift the responsibility onto their state counterparts, but grudgingly gave ground on Thursday, acknowledging they did have a role to play.THE CULTURE
The Culture is a weekly show focusing on film, music, TV, streaming, books and art. Each episode takes a deep dive into a work, artist or area where culture and society collide. TAKING SIDES OVER ‘DARK EMU’ Dark Emu appeared in bookshops in March 2014 much as most books do: with a brief publicity campaign arranged by its publisher. Bruce Pascoe was already something of a public figure – as well as publishing a short fiction journal during the 1980s, he’d written a number of novels and a well-received history of Australia’s frontier wars, Convincing Ground (2007) – and he is a wonderful7AM | THE MONTHLY
7am is a daily show from The Monthly and The Saturday Paper. It’s produced by Ruby Schwartz, Elle Marsh, Atticus Bastow, Michelle Macklem, and Cinnamon Nippard. WHY IT KEEPS HAPPENING TO VICTORIA Yesterday, Victorians were told the state’s seven day ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown would be extended for another week, as health authorities race to contain the latest Covid-19 outbreak. It’s the fourth lockdown in the state since the start of the pandemic, and now questions are being asked about why Victoria in particular seems so susceptible to the spread of the virus. OLIVIA RODRIGO TAKES OVER Olivia Rodrigo’s hit single ‘driver’s license’ is undeniably the biggest song of 2021 so far. Now the actor turned singer-songwriter has released her debut album ‘Sour’, which has broken streaming and chart records. But who is Olivia Rodrigo and why has a teenage girl’s break-up album resonated with so many people ofall ages?
THE PROBLEM WITH OUR TRUE CRIME OBSESSION Whether it’s podcasts like ‘Serial’ or ‘The Teacher’s Pet’, Netflix documentaries like ‘Making a Murderer’ or ‘Tiger King’, true crime is absolutely dominant. But what does our obsession with these stories say about us, and our perception of the world we live in? And with institutions like the police and the media under increasing scrutiny from the public, is it time for a "We will survive this crisis, but we need the support of readers." -Morry Schwartz
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