AustLit
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.
Latest Issues
Notes
-
Bound with LiNQ Vol.28 No.2 October 2001
-
Contents indexed selectively.
Contents
* Contents derived from the 2001 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
- What the Dance Looks Like: A Conversation with Ron Pretty, Gina Mercer (interviewer), single work interview (p. 9-16)
- Strange Towni"While street lights", single work poetry (p. 17)
- Museumi"In the small museum", single work poetry (p. 18)
- Paintingi"It's a lump inside her head", single work poetry (p. 19)
- Bland Landscapesi"At a thin brown desk in this stifling hotel room", single work poetry (p. 20)
- Workin the Wheatbinsi"him done gone away. fuckin little beaut. done", single work poetry (p. 21)
- The Pregnant Man : Gender, Identity and Sexuality in the Poetry of Dorothy Porter's 'Akhenaten', single work criticism (p. 22-29)
- Outskirts, single work prose (p. 30-33)
- Irish Grandmotheri"The Duchess of the Bog", single work poetry (p. 34)
- Another Countryi"When I was small", single work poetry (p. 35-36)
- Medieval Walli"You touch the pachydermatous wall", single work poetry (p. 39)
- The Bra-Making Class, single work short story (p. 40-49)
-
Smalli"We have no gentle name",
single work
poetry
The poem addresses (possibly the idea or thought of) a miscarried, aborted, or stillborn embryo.
- Waiting at a Bus Stopi"You just stood there on the footpath.", single work poetry (p. 51)
- Fourteeni"After the asthma attacks", single work poetry (p. 52)
- In May We Will Start Againi"At sixty he is only ever seven", single work poetry (p. 53)
- Happy New Yeari"Instead of an Easter egg", single work poetry (p. 54)
-
Death of an Artist,
single work
short story
A wood-turner retires when his arthritis becomes too bad to keep working, selling off all of his goods and tools. No longer able to do his beloved work, he wishes for death, detesting Mrs O'Neill from the Home Nursing Association's assistance. Unwilling to surrender to retirement, he fixes a carving blade to his hand and carves one last time, even as the blade cuts into his numb hand.
- Human Resourcesi"she wears her years lightly", single work poetry (p. 60)
- Real Meni"Forget feminism and", single work poetry (p. 61-62)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 7 Feb 2002 11:31:09
Common subjects:
Export this record