AustLit logo

AustLit

y separately published work icon Quadrant periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2020... vol. 64 no. 3 March 2020 of Quadrant est. 1957 Quadrant
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.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Dancersi"They danced to the same tune in a contemporary ballet company", Rowena Wiseman , single work poetry (p. 25)
Te Texture of Reality: Clive James, 1939-2019, David Free , single work obituary
'“All I can do is turn a phrase until it catches the light.” When Clive James died last November, at the age of eighty, news-papers and websites, along with a rump of literate tweeters, paid him the highest compliment a writer can receive. They quoted bushels of his best sentences, including that one. He was gone, but his phrases were still catching the light. Sometimes it was hard to tell whether they came from his poetry or prose. He had always hoped to be remembered as a poet. In the epigraphs to his Collected Poems, he quoted Horace: “If you rank me with the lyric poets, my exalted head shall strike the stars.” Whether James will be ranked that way it’s too early to know. But maybe we saw hints, in those first responses to his death, that the distinction between his verse and his prose will come to seem unimportant, in the long run. Maybe he’ll be remembered as a phrasemaker of genius who dispensed his mini-masterpieces in an unusually various range of delivery devices. The phrase quoted above originated, as it happens, in one of his memoirs. But it was poetry, wherever it came from.' (Introduction)
(p. 26-34)
Not Gold but It Stays Good : The Poetry of Clive James, Stephen McInerney , single work essay
'For most of his writing life Clive James was a much better poetry critic than he was a poet. Though he was wrong about Hardy, whose work he undervalued, he was particularly strong on twentieth-century poets, including W.B. Yeats, W.H. Auden, Louis MacNeice, Richard Wilbur and Philip Larkin, and he had an eye for newer talent (such as Stephen Edgar) others tended to miss before James spotted it. As a poet, though, he was for many years lost “through comfort” (to quote MacNeice on minor poets)—the comfort occasioned by celebrity and his remarkable achievements as a critic, memoirist and television personality. This makes his late flowering as a poet even more precious.' (Introduction)
(p. 35-40)
Dead Motheri"Dead mother is a doll, with a doll’s face,", Joe Dolce , single work poetry (p. 40)
Butterfly Sleeps Perched on the Temple Belli"“butterfly sleeps perched", Marilyn Peck , single work poetry (p. 62)
Climberi"Since a steep winter walk crocked my left knee", Derek Wright , single work poetry (p. 74)
Raising a Toasti"To Vanity I drink and cheap hotels", Jason Morgan , single work poetry (p. 75)
Dreamingi"From death men rise like ripples on the sea.", Jason Morgan , single work poetry (p. 75)
What Memory Tells Mei"We talked about the past,", Jason Morgan , single work poetry (p. 75)
Drunki"The hours began to blur.", Jason Morgan , single work poetry (p. 75)
Suburbiai"Next door in the new apartments,", Jason Morgan , single work poetry (p. 82)
Threesomei"in the beginning", John Ellison Davies , single work poetry (p. 86)
Mistakesi"I have been counting", John Ellison Davies , single work poetry (p. 86)
Ride Like a Girl: The Making of a Champion, Joe Dolce , single work review
— Review of Ride like a Girl Andrew Knight , Elise McCredie , 2018 single work film/TV ;
'Ride Like a Girl (2019), tells the true story of Michelle Payne (played by Teresa Palmer) the rst, and only, woman jockey to win the Melbourne Cup in its 160-year history. It was directed by Australian actress Rachel Griffths, who also co-produced it with Richard Keddie and Susie Montague, with a script by Elise McCredie.' (Introduction)
(p. 96-99)
All Our Good-Morrowsi"Till we loved we knew not what we did,", Derek Wright , single work poetry (p. 99)
When Did the Ordinary Become Extraordinary?i"At what point did remaining married to one person", David Harrison , single work poetry (p. 103)
2020i"The kangaroo had no inclination", Andrew Lee , single work poetry (p. 107)
The Hard Blue Edge, Barry Gillard , single work short story (p. 108-109)
Make Life an Arti"Head muddled, heart fatigued.", Rowena Wiseman , single work poetry (p. 110)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 17 Mar 2021 12:25:26
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X