Book Club in a Box: List of Titles
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Foreign Soil by Maxine Beneba Clarke HACHETTE
2015 STELLA PRIZE SHORTLISTED TITLE Foreign Soil by Maxine Beneba Clarke HACHETTE ‘Wondrous as she seemed, Shu Yi wasn’t a problem I wanted to take on. Besides, with her arrival my own life had become easier: Melinda and the others hadn’t come looking for me in months. At home, my thankful mother had finally taken the plastic undersheet off my bed.’ Maxine Beneba Clarke, Foreign Soil INTRODUCTION TO THE TEXT suitable for study. A short synopsis and series of This collection of short stories won the Victorian reading questions are allocated for each story, along Premier’s Award for an Unpublished Manuscript in with any themes that are not included in the general 2013, and was subsequently published by Hachette list of the book’s themes below. Following this Australia. It went on to be critically recognised and breakdown are activities that can be applied to the appear on the shortlists for numerous awards. book more broadly. Like all of Maxine Beneba Clarke’s work, this ABOUT THE AUTHOR collection reflects an awareness of voices that are often pushed to the fringes of society, and frequently MAXINE BENEBA CLARKE is speaks to the experiences of immigrants, refugees and an Australian writer and slam single mothers, in addition to lesbian, gay, bisexual, poetry champion of Afro-Caribbean transgender and intersex people. In Foreign Soil, descent. She is the author of the Clarke captures the anger, hope, despair, desperation, poetry collections Gil Scott Heron is strength and desire felt by members of these groups, on Parole (Picaro Press, 2009) and Nothing Here Needs and many others. -
ANNUAL REPORT 2019 Revellers at New Year’S Eve 2018 – the Night Is Yours
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION ANNUAL REPORT 2019 Revellers at New Year’s Eve 2018 – The Night is Yours. Image: Jared Leibowtiz Cover: Dianne Appleby, Yawuru Cultural Leader, and her grandson Zeke 11 September 2019 The Hon Paul Fletcher MP Minister for Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Dear Minister The Board of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation is pleased to present its Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 2019. The report was prepared for section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013, in accordance with the requirements of that Act and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983. It was approved by the Board on 11 September 2019 and provides a comprehensive review of the ABC’s performance and delivery in line with its Charter remit. The ABC continues to be the home and source of Australian stories, told across the nation and to the world. The Corporation’s commitment to innovation in both storytelling and broadcast delivery is stronger than ever, as the needs of its audiences rapidly evolve in line with technological change. Australians expect an independent, accessible public broadcasting service which produces quality drama, comedy and specialist content, entertaining and educational children’s programming, stories of local lives and issues, and news and current affairs coverage that holds power to account and contributes to a healthy democratic process. The ABC is proud to provide such a service. The ABC is truly Yours. Sincerely, Ita Buttrose AC OBE Chair Letter to the Minister iii ABC Radio Melbourne Drive presenter Raf Epstein. -
Annual Report 2006-2007: Part 2 – Overview
24 international broadcasting then... The opening transmission of Radio Australia in December 1939, known then as “Australia Calling”. “Australia Calling… Australia Calling”, diminishing series of transmission “hops” announced the clipped voice of John Royal around the globe. For decades to come, through the crackle of shortwave radio. It was listeners would tune their receivers in the a few days before Christmas 1939. Overseas early morning and dusk and again at night broadcasting station VLQ 2—V-for-victory, to receive the clearest signals. Even then, L-for-liberty, Q-for-quality—had come alive signal strength lifted and fell repeatedly, to the impending terror of World War II. amid the atmospheric hash. The forerunner of Radio Australia broadcast Australia Calling/Radio Australia based itself in those European languages that were still in Melbourne well south of the wartime widely used throughout South-East Asia at “Brisbane Line” and safe from possible the end of in the colonial age—German, Dutch, Japanese invasion. Even today, one of Radio French, Spanish and English. Australia’s principal transmitter stations is located in the Victorian city of Shepparton. Transmission signals leapt to the ionosphere —a layer of electro-magnetic particles By 1955, ABC Chairman Sir Richard Boyer surrounding the planet—before reflecting summed up the Radio Australia achievement: down to earth and bouncing up again in a “We have sought to tell the story of this section 2 25 country with due pride in our achievements international broadcasting with Australia and way of life, but without ignoring the Television. Neither the ABC nor, later, differences and divisions which are inevitable commercial owners of the service could in and indeed the proof of a free country”. -
The Literary Studies Convention @ Wollongong University 7 – 11 July 2015
1 The Literary Studies Convention @ Wollongong University 7 – 11 July 2015 with the support of AAL, the Australasian Association of Literature ASAL, the Association for the Study of Australian Literature AULLA, the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association The Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts School of the Arts, English and Media English and Writing Program University of Wollongong and Cengage Learning Maney Publishing The convention venues are Buildings 19, 20 and 24 of the University of Wollongong. The Barry Andrews Memorial Lecture and Prize-Giving will be in the Hope Lecture Theatre (Building 43) ** Please note that some books by delegates and keynote speakers will be for sale in the University of Wollongong’s Unishop in Building 11. Look for the special display for the Literary Networks Convention. 2 3 Barry Andrews Memorial Address: Tony Birch .......................................................................... 10 Keynote Address: Carolyn Dinshaw ............................................................................................. 11 Keynote Address: Rita Felski ......................................................................................................... 12 Dorothy Green Memorial Lecture: Susan K. Martin .................................................................. 13 Plenary Panel: Australia’s Literary Culture and the Australian Book Industry ....................... 14 Plenary Panel: Literary Studies in Australian Universities – Structures and Futures ........... 16 Stephen -
Weightlessness and Weightiness in Kim Scott’S Benang: from the Heart
HONOURS THESIS IN ENGLISH AND CREATIVE WRITING A GROUNDED EXISTENCE: Weightlessness and Weightiness in Kim Scott’s Benang: from the heart Holly Guise This thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in English and Creative Writing at Murdoch University, 2015. DECLARATION I declare that this dissertation is my own account of my research and contains as its main content work which has not been previously submitted for a degree at any tertiary educational institution. Holly Guise October 2015 i COPYRIGHT ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I acknowledge that a copy of this thesis will be held at the Murdoch University Library. I understand that, under the provisions s51.2 of the Copyright Act 1968, all or part of this thesis may be copied without infringement of copyright where such a reproduction is for the purposes of study and research. This statement does not signal any transfer of copyright away from the author. Signed: … Full Name of Degree: Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in English and Creative Writing Thesis Title: A Grounded Existence: Weightlessness and Weightiness in Kim Scott’s Benang: from the heart Author: Holly Guise (31511451) Year: 2015 ii ABSTRACT This thesis argues that, in Indigenous Australian Kim Scott’s novel Benang: from the heart (1999), images of weightlessness and weightiness contrast and coalesce in myriad ways. Spanning the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the South-West region of Western Australia, Scott constructs a polyphonic, subversive and inclusive narrative that represents various Nyoongar identities struggling for identity and place. Current criticism predominantly focuses on weightlessness in relation to Indigenous protagonist Harley Scat’s fragile grasp on identity, history and culture. -
Kim Scott's Writing and the Wirlomin Noongar Language and Stories Project
Disputed Territories as Sites of Possibility: Kim Scott's Writing and the Wirlomin Noongar Language and Stories Project Natalie Quinlivan BA International Studies, BA Communications (Creative Writing), MA English A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences School of Literature, Art and Media University of Sydney April 2019 Abstract Kim Scott was the first Aboriginal author to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award in 2000 for Benang, an award he won again in 2011 for That Deadman Dance. Yet despite these national accolades, Scott interrogates the very categories of Australian and Indigenous literatures to which his work is subjected. His writing reimagines, incorporates and challenges colonial ways of thinking about people and place. This thesis reveals the provocative proposal running through Scott’s collected works and projects that contemporary Australian society (and literature) should be grafted onto regional Aboriginal languages and stories as a way to express a national sense of “who we are and what we might be”. Scott’s vision of a truly postcolonial Australia and literature is articulated through his collected writings which form a network of social, historical, political and personal narratives. This thesis traces how Scott’s writing and the Wirlomin Noongar Language and Stories Project (Wirlomin Project) reconfigure colonial power relationships in the disputed territories of place, language, history, identity and the globalised world of literature. Ultimately, Scott intends to create an empowered Noongar position in cross-cultural exchange and does so by disrupting the fixed categories inherent in these territories; territories constructed during the colonising and nationalising of Australia. -
About the Book 2 About the Author 2 Conversation Starters 3 for Reference 4 Also by Michelle De Kretser 4 If You Liked This Book
About the book 2 About the author 2 Conversation starters 3 For reference 4 Also by Michelle de Kretser 4 If you liked this book ... 4 Welcome to Allen & Unwin’s Book Group Guide for The Life to Come the dazzling new novel from Michelle de Kretser, author of Questions of Travel, bestseller and winner of the Miles Franklin Award. About the book Set in Sydney, Paris and Sri Lanka, The Life to Come is a mesmerising novel about the stories we tell and don’t tell ourselves as individuals, as societies and as nations. It feels at once firmly classic and exhilaratingly contemporary. Pippa is a writer who longs for success. Celeste tries to convince herself that her feelings for her married lover are reciprocated. Ash makes strategic use of his childhood in Sri Lanka but blots out the memory of a tragedy from that time. Driven by riveting stories and unforgettable characters, here is a dazzling meditation on intimacy, loneliness and our flawed perception of other people. Profoundly moving as well as wickedly funny, The Life to Come reveals how the shadows cast by both the past and the future can transform, distort and undo the present. This extraordinary novel by Miles Franklin-winning author Michelle de Kretser will strike to your soul. ‘...one of those rare writers whose work balances substance with style. Her writing is very witty, but it also goes deep, informed at every point by a benign and far-reaching intelligence.’ Kerryn Goldsworthy, Sydney Morning Herald About the author Michelle de Kretser was born in Sri Lanka and emigrated to Australia when she was 14. -
EDITORIAL REVIEW No.3 TOPIC: Story/Issue Choices
EDITORIAL REVIEW No.3 TOPIC: Story/issue choices on selected ABC Radio programs SCOPE: The Morning programs on a range of selected capital city and regional Local Radio stations and Radio National. The programs: 702 ABC Sydney – Linda Mottram 774 ABC Melbourne – Jon Faine 612 ABC Brisbane – Steve Austin 891 ABC Adelaide – Ian Henschke 720 ABC Perth – Geoff Hutchison 95.9 ABC Western Plains (Dubbo) – Dugald Saunders/Kelly Fuller 630 North Queensland (Townsville) – Paula Tapiolas 684 The South West (Bunbury) – Naomi Christensen Radio National – Natasha Mitchell TIMEFRAME: One day a week for a four week period (collected retrospectively, with no advance notice to program teams) Week 1: Monday’s program Week 2: Tuesday’s program Week 3: Wednesday’s program Week 4: Thursday’s program APPROACH: ABC Editorial Policy Information will collect the material in the form of program rundowns and audio files of the entire programs for the relevant timeframes. For each edition of each program, the top three subjects of discussion will be identified, based on the time spent discussing each topic/issue. In other words, the top three items will be those to which the program devoted the most amount of time. This may include a range of different items under one topic (for example, an interview with a Minister on a specific policy followed by a reaction from a stakeholder and then followed by talkback from listeners, all on the same subject, would together count as one item). The reviewer will also be provided with a summary of the top issues/topics that Australians consider most relevant and important to them. -
Media Release
Media Release Sofie Laguna named winner of Miles Franklin Award 2015 Award has supported Australian authors with close to $1 million in philanthropic funds distributed 23 June 2015 Perpetual, as Trustee of the Miles Franklin Literary Award, today announced Sofie Laguna as the winner of the 2015 award for her novel, The Eye of the Sheep. The Miles Franklin Literary Award, recognised as Australia’s most prestigious literary prize, was established in 1954 through the Will of My Brilliant Career author, Stella Maria Sarah Miles Franklin, to encourage and support writers of Australian literature. Ms Laguna will receive $60,000 in prize money with her novel strongly presenting “Australian Life in any of its phases” and judged to be of the “highest literary merit”, in line with the criteria set out by Miles Franklin. Since moving away from careers in law and acting, Melbourne-based Ms Laguna has written for a wide readership, from picture books for very young children to series for older readers. Her debut novel for adults, One Foot Wrong, was long-listed for the Miles Franklin Literary Award in 2009. The Eye of the Sheep was selected from a short list of powerful Australian voices depicting unforgettable characters, including authors Joan London, Sonya Hartnett, Christine Piper and Craig Sherborne. Commenting on behalf of the judging panel, State Library of NSW Mitchell Librarian, Richard Neville, said that the power of Ms Laguna’s finely crafted novel lies in the “raw, high-energy and coruscating language” which describes the world of central character, young Jimmy Flick. “Jimmy Flick is a character who sees everything, but his manic x-ray perceptions don’t correspond with the way others see his world. -
OHQ E-Bulletin, September 2017
e-Bulletin 30 September 2017 1. Australian Refugee History 2. Podcasts and Oral History 3. Taking it on – Audio Archiving for the Next Generation 4. Some Oral History Basics 5. Get to Know Trove 6. New heritage guide of Brisbane 7. Lost Trades Fair 8. Lebanese Storekeepers in Queensland 9. Oral History Australia National Conference – report from Hamish Sewell 10. Oral History Queensland Annual General Meeting – a reminder 11. New Zealand Newsletter 12. Crush Festival WriteFest 2017 13. Brisbane Square Library Events 14. More on Dignity Therapy Hello Oral History Queensland members, here is your ninth e-Bulletin for 2017. As always send me any information you have to share in our e-Bulletin at [email protected] and use OHQ E-Bulletin in the subject line. If you have an event coming up, let me know as soon as you can to ensure it gets in the e-Bulletin in time. The editor reserves the right not to publish if any information is judged to be inappropriate. Please visit our web site: www.ohq.org.au and “Like” our Facebook page. Also check our Blog which is updated weekly with stories related to oral history. Feel free to add a comment. Any feedback is very welcome. During September, myself and a few other members of OHQ presented and attended the Oral History Australia National Conference in Sydney. I attended the Podcasting workshop with Siobhan McHugh and thoroughly enjoyed it. This and the subsequent presentations at the conference were both very stimulating and exhausting. My head is spinning with all the great papers presented. -
I Never Took Myself Seriously As a Writer Until I Studied at Macquarie.” LIANE MORIARTY MACQUARIE GRADUATE and BEST-SELLING AUTHOR
2 swf.org.au RESEARCH & ENGAGEMENT 1817 - 2017 luxury property sales and rentals THE UN OF ITE L D A S R T E A T N E E S G O E F T A A M L E U R S I N C O A ●C ● SYDNEY THE LIFTED BROW Welcome 3 SWF 2017 swf.org.au A Message from the Artistic Director Contents eading can be a mixed blessing. For In a special event, writer and photographer 4-15 anyone who has had the misfortune Bill Hayes talks to Slate’s Stephen Metcalf about City & Walsh Bay to glance at the headlines recently, Insomniac City: New York, Oliver, and Me, an the last few months have felt like a intimate love letter to New York and his late Guest Curators 4 long fever dream, for reasons that partner, beloved writer and neurologist extend far beyond the outcome of the Oliver Sacks. R Bernadette Brennan has delved into 7 US Presidential election or Brexit. Nights at Walsh Bay More than 20 million refugees are on the move the career of one of Australia’s most adept and another 40 million people are displaced in and admired authors, Helen Garner, with Thinking Globally 11 their own countries, in the largest worldwide A Writing Life. An all-star cast of Garner humanitarian crisis since 1945. admirers – Annabel Crabb, Benjamin Law Scientists announced that the Earth reached and Fiona McFarlane – will join Bernadette City & Walsh Bay its highest temperatures in 2016 – for the third in conversation with Rebecca Giggs about year in a row. -
Books of the Year
Survey Books of the Year Sarah Holland-Batt in Catherine Lacey’s Pew (Granta), a novel that reads like After years of anticipation, I was thrilled to finally read Jaya Flannery O’Connor penned an episode of The Twilight Zone. Savige’s dazzling third volume, Change Machine (UQP, reviewed In non-fiction, fellow Western Australian Rebecca Giggs’s BOOK YOUR SEASON PACKAGE in ABR, October 2020): an intoxicatingly inventive and erudite Fathoms: The world in the whale (Scribe) left me feeling like I’d collection rife with anagrams, puns, and mondegreens that surfaced from some uncharted deep – breathless, awestruck, ricochets from Westminster to Los Angeles to Marrakesh, re- and brimming with questions. mixing multicultural linguistic detritus into forms of the poet’s own invention. Yet for all the book’s global sweep, it’s the quiet Judith Brett poems about fatherhood that stay with me, especially Savige’s For the past two springs, I have driven from Victoria to the immensely moving elegy for a premature son, ‘Tristan’s Ascen- Flinders Ranges. Not this year, of course. Instead, locked sion’, with its devastating simplicity: ‘Oh, son. You stepped off down in the city, I read Garry Disher’s three novels set in one stop too soon. / Your mother has flown // all the way to South Australia’s dry farming country, where Constable Paul Titan / to look for you.’ I also loved Prithvi Varatharajan’s Hirschman drives up and down the Barrier Highway to solve Entries (Cordite), an introspective and deeply intelligent crimes small and large: Bitter Wash Road, Peace, and the most collection of mostly prose poems whose overriding note is one recent, Consolation (Text).