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AbstractHistoryArchive Description
'In 1956, Bernard Smith wrote that the people of Australia were migratory birds. This was to become a leading motif of his own thinking, and a significant inspiration for author Peter Beilharz. Beilharz came to argue that the idea of the antipodes made sense less in its geographical form than in its cultural form, viewed as a relation rather than a place. Australians had one foot here and one foot there, whichever 'there' this was. This way of thinking with and after Bernard Smith makes up one current of Beilharz's best Australian essays. Two other streams contribute to this collection of Beilharz's essays. The second recovers and publicizes antipodean intellectuals - from Childe to Evatt to Stretton to Jean Martin - who have often been overshadowed by the reception given to metropolitan celebrity thinkers. This second stream also examines others, like Hughes and Carey, who have been celebrated as writers more than as interpreters of the antipodean condition. The third stream engages with mainstream views of Australian writing, and with the limits of these views. When thinking in terms of cultural traffic, then the stories told about Australia will also be global and regional in a broader sense.' (Publication summary)
Contents
- A Christmas Letter (for Peter Beilharz)i"Dear Peter, I quite often think", single work poetry (p. ix-x)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Phillip Hall Reviews Thinking the Antipodes by Peter Beilharz
2016
single work
review
— Appears in: Plumwood Mountain [Online] , August 2016;
— Review of Thinking the Antipodes : Australian Essays 2015 selected work essay
-
Phillip Hall Reviews Thinking the Antipodes by Peter Beilharz
2016
single work
review
— Appears in: Plumwood Mountain [Online] , August 2016;
— Review of Thinking the Antipodes : Australian Essays 2015 selected work essay