Category: Magazines | Series: Illustoria Magazine Ser.
Explore the wide-world of maps: historic, imaginary, contemporary, and designed by you. The newest issue of Illustoria takes you on all sorts of different journeys, while bringing you the thrilling activities, comics, student writing, interviews, and more that you've come to expect. Illustoria is a pri ...Show more
Category: Magazines
Is empathy, like water, in increasingly short supply?Now more than ever we need empathy, and Griffith Review 70: Generosities of Spirit explores and celebrates generosities and kindnesses, those uplifting and memorable experiences that illuminate our lives. Featuring inspiring despatches from the frontl ...Show more
Category: Magazines | Series: Illustoria Magazine Ser.
Explore the wide world of creative re-use Meet artists who transform found objects into visual delights, and visit the Museum of Trash--curated rubbish collected by a sanitation worker. Learn about fungi, nature's original 'upcyclers', and raid your kitchen for materials that can be used to mix your own ...Show more
Category: Magazines
What went wrong for Labor and how did Scott Morrison achieve his remarkable victory? In this dazzling report from the campaign trail, Erik Jensen homes in on the insecurities that drive Bill Shorten and the certainties that helped Scott Morrison win. He considers how each man reflects, challenges and co ...Show more
Category: Magazines | Series: Griffith Review Ser.
From our first experiences to our last, institutions structure our world - through education and medicine to politics, justice, civics and religion. But in recent years even the most entrenched of institutions are seemingly on the edge of implosion. Either through deliberate political attacks or as an e ...Show more
Category: Magazines
Griffith Review 71: Remaking the Balance features essays, reportage, memoir, fiction and poetry that examine our relationship with resources both tangible and intangible, physical and personal. What we grow, eat, mine, burn, transform and manufacture all place increasing stress on the world's ecosystems ...Show more
Category: Magazines | Series: Illustoria Magazine Ser.
For more information, visit McSweeneys.net Creatures are weird. In Illustoria #11, you''ll find a parade of real, imaginary, and ugly animals, including zooplankton -- the tiniest creatures. You''ll meet wildlife specialists and medieval-era pets. Trace your pencil along the 3-D Monstermaze and create ...Show more
Category: Magazines | Series: McSweeney's Quarterly Concern Ser.
McSweeney's 62: The Queer Fiction Issue, collects absurd, bold, bleak, humorous, and astonishing works of fiction and art by queer writers of all orientations. Inside this luxurious hardcover, you'll find stories about storm chasers and Colombian supermodels, about talking plants and DIY bands and cambo ...Show more
Category: Periodicals
America is fading, and China will soon be the dominant power in our region. What does this mean for Australia's future? In this controversial and urgent essay, Hugh White shows that the contest between America and China is classic power politics of the harshest kind. He argues that we are heading for a ...Show more
Category: Magazines
When New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced her pregnancy, the headlines raced around the world. But when Scott Morrison and Josh Frydenberg became the first Prime Minister and Treasurer duo since the 1970s to take on those roles while bringing up primary-school-aged children, this detail p ...Show more
Category: Magazines
Australia is the world’s biggest coal exporter, accounting for over a third of coal exports worldwide. In 2018, coal overtook iron ore as our most valuable export. Scott Morrison’s government has embraced coal, doubling down on supporting the industry, calling climate-based boycotts of coal ...Show more
Category: Magazines
The Lives of Others is concerned with the debts and obligations that accompany the passing of the generations. 'For no one bears this life alone' is how Hoelderlin describes the mutuality that binds us to our forebears. Each of the contributors to this issue of Southerly endeavours to understand the way ...Show more