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Rebecca Duffy is an Australian student studying in Indonesia. She witnessed first-hand the earthquake in Yogyakarta; this is her account.
Kirsty Sangster on Plenty: Art into Poetry by Peter Steele.
Terms of endearment. Smashing idea. Back in the saddle.
The fire at the Camp Sovereignty Aboriginal protest action staged to coincide with the Melbourne Commonwealth Games was finally extinguished last week. Some believe it has thrust indigenous rights back onto the political agenda, while others believe the action has inadvertently reversed years of hard work.
Pundits who were left gasping by the announcements of Colin (‘Cry me a river’) Barnett would have been less surprised if they’d read the last issue of the Okotsk Institute Journal of Research into Inexplicable Public Behaviours.
Jane Carolan speaks with doyen feminist and political activist Anne Summers.
Troy Bramston looks at new ideas in Imagining Australia: Ideas for our future.
Kirsty Sangster reviews Christine Balint’s Ophelia’s fan: A story about dreams, Shakespeare and love.
Kirsty Sangster looks at the effectiveness of truth commissions.
Sally Young’s The Persuaders: Inside the Hidden Machine of Political Advertising is an important book for those interested in political and social change, says Peter Yewers.
Kirsty Sangster recalls a Holocaust survivor.
Matthew Lamb on John Ralston Saul’s The Collapse of Globalism: And the Reinvention of the World.
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