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y separately published work icon The Journal of Commonwealth Literature periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2023... vol. 58 no. 4 December 2023 of The Journal of Commonwealth Literature est. 1965 The Journal of Commonwealth Literature
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'I am very pleased to be introducing my first issue of the JCL Bibliography, having taken up the post of editor in January 2023. My appointment follows the long tenure of Vassilena Parashkevova, who held the position since 2008. I am sure JCL readers will join me in thanking Vassilena for her years of excellent leadership of this essential annual resource; they will also know that I have some very large shoes to fill. I hope that I can keep up her capable work, while also adding some of my own flavour to the issue going forward.' (Lucinda Newns, Introduction)

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2023 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Australia, Nathan Hobby , single work criticism

'For many Australians 2022 marked a return to a more normal life resembling pre-pandemic conditions, as almost all Covid restrictions, mitigations, and reporting were wound back. Yet a new “normal” was also emerging, with over 20,000 excess deaths, half of them directly attributed to Covid, and increasing concern over the effects of long Covid (Alison Barrett, British Medical Journal 13 April 2023). In the May 2022 election, Australia had a change of government, with the centre-left Labor Party taking power after nine years of conservative government. The most remarkable aspect of the election was the huge cross-bench returned in the lower house, including six independents running on a platform of climate action and integrity in traditional conservative strongholds and four Greens members. Literature funding through the Australia Council had declined 40% under the previous government and the new Arts Minister, Tony Burke, declared an end to “the nine-year political attack on the arts and entertainment sector”, announcing the development of a new National Cultural Policy (ABC News, 24 August). Unveiled in late January 2023 the policy included a “First Nations First” focus on Indigenous people and their stories and established “Writers Australia” to provide “direct support to the literature sector from 2025”, to “grow local and international audiences for Australian books and establish a National Poet Laureate for Australia” (“Revive”, Office for the Arts).' (Introduction)

(p. 761–787)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 5 Dec 2023 10:43:48
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