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‘Pavillon now OPEN. Surving FOOD and DRIN’. This sign, propped up outside Spencer Street Station, was attracting a lot of passing attention the other morning.
Juliette Hughes reviews the John Butler Trio’s Living 2001-2002 and The Liszt Album, and Maryanne Confoy reviews Australia’s Religious Communities.
Anthony Ham returns to the Ivory Coast and looks at its efforts.
Mark Carkeet celebrates the life and work of Evelyn Waugh.
Reviews of the films The Station Agent, The Passion of the Christ, The Fog of War and Irreversible.
Andrew Hamilton critiques Robert Manne’s Quarterly Essay, Sending them Home: Refugees and the new politics of indifference.
Robert Hefner speaks with Morag Fraser and Peter Steele about the qualities that made Eureka Street a special magazine.
Reviews of Carry Me Down, Great Australian Racing Stories, The Story of Christianity and Macquarie Atlas of Indigenous Australia
Peter Hamilton prepares to cast his first vote in a US election
On the 25th anniversary of the election of the Sandinista government, Nicaragua is still subject to the machinations of Central American politics
Travelling in order to see how different people live is essential to the formation of a genuine tolerance of other cultures.
The trouble is that men and women who like, or fantasise about, having sex with children don’t look like monsters. They look just like the neighbours.
73-84 out of 84 results.