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Meanjin Vol 79 No 2 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Anthologies
Intimacy Author and essayist Lucia Osborne-Crowley examines the cost of intimacy for women in a world where men demand exclusive access to the closeness of their female partners, often without returning the emotional labour involved. Other essays include- Academic and author Toby Miller looks at the st ...Show more
Meanjin Vol 79 No 4 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Anthologies
The issue opens with reflective contributions from all of Meanjin's living past editors ... Tara June Winch and Behrouz Boochani offer a conversational meditation on time and the very notion of a future. Bruce Pascoe writes on the strange relationship non-Indigenous Australians have with trees, and wo ...Show more
Meanjin Vol 80 No 1 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Anthologies
Australia is the fourth biggest country in the world for QAnon social media content and discussion, and its fans are a wide ranging group, from celebrity chef Pete Evans to federal MP's like George Christensen. Margaret Simons wonders what brings them all together, why ideas like the theories promoted b ...Show more
Meanjin Vol 80, No 2 by GREEN JONATHAN
$24.99 AUD
Category: Anthologies
'The world knows that the Australian immigration process is very tough.' In the magazine's cover feature Still Lives, five people now resident in Australia and New Zealand tell in vivid first-hand accounts the stories of lives stilled by statelessness or detention, and lives settled in a new home and a ...Show more
Meanjin Vol 80, No 3 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Anthologies
'I've never been too impressed with the metaphoric mountain-top that Black race scholars and civil rights activists have typically been concerned with, of a promised land and a dream . . . As appealing as it sounds I don't believe that such a world will ever be possible in a settler colonial state . . . ...Show more
The Year My Politics Broke by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Politics
In a world of global information flow and almost organic interconnection, the influence of traditional 'government' may be on the wane. For now, this spreads a sense of disconnection. Distrust. A lack of faith. It may soon resolve into a sense of great opportunity a a way, at last, to make politics and ...Show more
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