Meanjin Quarterly Summer 2019 - Vol 78 No 4 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Rediscovering Captain James Cook- Paul Daley combs through the archives, visits Cook's papers in the National Library, speaks with Indigenous Australian thinkers and comes up with a reappraisal of the great explorer's impact.Selling the farm- the author of Rusted Off Why Country Australia Is Fed Up, Gab ...Show more
WellBeing: Wild Magazine
$12.00 AUD
Category: Periodical
Issue #3 Are you one of the WILD ones? Meet WILD, a new publication for the curious – the thought leaders, belief shakers and paradise creators. What's in WILD #3: Perspectives Is there power in protest? New love in a pandemic Is it possible? Why do conspiracy theories exist? How to support Indig ...Show more
Limelight March 2020 - Australia's Classical Music and Arts Magazine by Limelight
$11.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Cover story- Armenian-Australian soprano Natalie Aroyan, a rapidly rising star, discusses the two role debuts she is making for Opera Australia this year, as prisoner Odabella in Verdi's revenge opera Attila and as Rachel in Halevy's grand French opera La Juive about a dangerous affair - both rarely see ...Show more
Meanjin Vol 79 No 2 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
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 78 No 3 by Jonathan Green
$24.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
In the September Meanjin, author of The Tribe and The Lebs, and founder of Western Sydney's Sweatshop writing collective, Michael Mohammed Ahmad sets down an extraordinary account of literature, race and black activism in a landmark essay 'Reading Malcolm X in Arab Australia'. Ahmad draws parallels betw ...Show more
The Jews of Ukraine: The Jewish Quarterly JQ 251 by Jonathan Pearlman
$22.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Limelight July 2021
$11.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Cover story- In 1980, The Australian Ballet opened a production of Anna Karenina based on Tolstoy's turbulent, tragic novel with choreography by Andre Prokovsky to music by Tchaikovsky. Forty years on, the company stages a very different version by former Bolshoi Ballet dancer Yuri Possokhov to a specia ...Show more
Limelight October 2021 by Limelight
$11.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
With 11 editions per year containing features, interviews, profiles, news, reviews and listening guides, Limelight provides unrivalled breadth, depth, liveliness and quality for discerning readers.Cover story- Film Notes- ABC Classic recently recorded the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra playing Nigel Westl ...Show more
Granta 158: In the Family by Sigrid Rausing
$24.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Britain's most prestigious literary magazine brings you prize-winning fiction, memoir, reportage, poetry and photography from around the world.
Cosmos Magazine: Summer 2019 - Issue 81 by Cosmos Magazine
$15.00 AUD
Category: Periodical
1. Zeroing in on consciousness - Elizabeth Finkel It was once a problem for philosophers. No longer. Braining imaging studies are zeroing in to explain this once nebulous feature of the human experience. 2. Nanosats Mars (IEEE) Diminutive cube sats are all the rage because they are cheap to launch. B ...Show more
Limelight August 2019 by Limelight
$9.99 AUD
Category: Periodical
Cover story-Wonder Women- The Australian Ballet performs Sylvia in a new production by Stanton Welch for which the lead ballerinas are learning to sword-fight. Centring on a fierce nymph who falls for a mortal man, the playful, mythological ballet features a gorgeous score by Leo Delibes, which Tchaikov ...Show more
Griffith Review 63 - Writing the Country by Ashley Hay; Julianne Schultz
$27.99 AUD
Category: Periodical | Series: Griffith Review Ser.
How we speak of and to the world we live in requires us to make sense of where we are and where we?re going; it requires us to describe, interrogate and analyse our places from the smallest to the grandest of scales.In the second issue of Griffith Review, published fifteen years ago, Melissa Lucashenko ...Show more