The Australian Public Intellectual Network
  Home    Network Books    Australian Common Reader    Network Reviews    Virtual Library   
Sunday, 19th May 2013
      
 
API MENU

API Review of Books

Altitude BirdIssue 44
Features reviews by Kathleen Broderick, Linn Miller, Christine Choo, Bill Thorpe, David Ritter, Eve Vincent, Stephanie Bishop, Alison Miles, Richard Kay, Amanda Day, Bernard Whimpress, Mads Clausen, Marion May Campbell, Sylvia Alston, Catie Gilchrist, Eva Chapman, Lucy Dougan, Stephen Lawrence and Nathanael O'Reilly. Click here for more details.


Altitude

Altitude BirdPopular Music: Practices, Formations and Change - Australian Perspectives
The papers collected here in this special edition of Altitude offer a brief snapshot of popular music research broadly connected with Australia. The essays demonstrate the variety of theoretical and methodological approaches used by researchers in the fields of popular music studies and cultural studies to explore themes of popular music practice, formation and change in an Australian context. Click here for more details.



 
 
 
 
Network Scholars

History in Black and White: a critical analysis of the Black Armband debate

  • Anna Clark
    imageIn December 1998, a letter from B J Wright of Glenelg East, South Australia, was published in Quadrant, a conservative Australian literary journal. Wright complained that the recent widespread commemoration of Aboriginal history was endangering the country:Sorry Day was nothing less than an emotion-driven exercise in Black-armbandism for the moral uplift of middle class non-natives. The result of all this may well be the unintended adoption of very opposite attitudes by the manipulable young.1‘Black armband’ history came to define a growing reappraisal of Australia’s past, ...
    Click here to read more.

Network Review of Books

Australia and the British Embrace: The Demise of the Imperial Ideal (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Daniel Oakman in the November 2002 issue.
    The central proposition of Stuart Ward's Australia and the British Embrace is that Australian political culture did not defiantly cut the apron strings and reject the bonds of the British connection, as asserted in the radical-nationalist tradition of Australian history. Instead, Ward argues that since 1945 Australia was 'pulled along reluctantly in the wake of changing British policies and priorities'. The episode through which Ward pursues these questions is the United Kingdom's decision to seek membership of the European Economic Community (EEC) in the early 1960s. In the early chapters, ... read more.
     

Oscar and Lucinda (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Melissa Bellanta in the April 2003 issue.
    My initial encounter with Peter Carey was decidedly nasty. Some years ago I read The Tax Inspector, and could hardly sleep for days in horror of Benny Catchprice. Carey had drawn Benny with a savage verisimilitude: his pale angel-beauty and violent instability making him almost surreally lifelike, like Martin Bryant walking from a nightmare into Port Arthur's reality. Of course, Benny Catchprice is not Carey's only creation -- nor is nasty his only register. Indeed, now that University of Queensland Press has reissued his back-catalogue (along with a new collection of his stories), one thing ... read more.

The Enabling State (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Philip Mendes in the October 2001 issue.
    Labor MP Mark Latham is Australia's best known Australian advocate of Third Way views. His co-editor, Professor Peter Botsman, is also well known as a former Director of both the Evatt Foundation and the Brisbane Institute. Their new book, The Enabling State, promises to offer a new paradigm for welfare funding and provision in Australia. The Enabling State contains 15 chapters including substantial contributions by Botsman and Latham. Other contributors include representatives of the Scottish employment training company, the Wise Group; British social entrepreneur Reverend Andrew Mawson; ... read more.

The Flight of the Emu: A Hundred Years of Australian Ornithology 1901-2001 (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Joanna Sassoon in the June 2002 issue.
    The Flight of the Emu traces the way Australian birds became the object of serious scientific interest. Nominative determinism aside, in taking Robin under their wing, Birds Australia selected someone well suited to writing the history of the discipline of ornithology, and the role of the Royal Australasian Ornithological Union (RAOU) within it. This book combines a knowledge of a history of ideas that surround and inform ornithology, with some of the key scientific questions and challenges that have faced the discipline in the last 100 years. In saying this, this book is more than a history ... read more.

A Certain Style: Beatrice Davis - A Literary Life (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Louise Poland in the Dec 2001-Jan 2002 issue.
    Women have always been active in book publishing in Australia, although their contributions have often been hidden by history. Witness, for example, the absence of the following publishers and editors from mainstream Australian publishing histories: Violet Teague, Geraldine Rede, Hilda Esson, Joan Phipson, Bessie Mitchell, Barbara Ramsden, Nan McDonald, Mary Quick and Marjorie Pizer. Like her remarkable sisters in Australian publishing before the 1960s and 1970s, Beatrice Davis was unusual or 'out of type'. Unlike most of them, she was a legend. This long-awaited biography of Beatrice Davis, ... read more.

Night of Warehouses: Poems 1978-2000 (2001)

  • imageReviewed by Tim Metcalf in the August 2002 issue.
    The five books from which this selection was made, and the thirty-three pages of new poems, ensure a hearty feast for fans of Oliver and those fascinated by the evolution of poetry in the Antipodes. There is from the outset an emphasis on a 'transtasman' poetic. Set largely in the harbour cities of Auckland and Sydney, the antics of light dominate the images that Oliver so skilfully evokes. From book one he demonstrates an assured and integrated poetic:This time of year the clouds could be happening while the days spin you/me different waysOliver treads precisely, careful not to trip over ... read more.



 
The Australian Common Reader Project

Need to Contact Us?