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Matthew Da Silva Matthew Da Silva i(A7403 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Matthew Da Silva Reviews Southerly Matthew Da Silva , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , no. 28 2022;

— Review of Southerly vol. 79 no. 2 2021 periodical issue

'It was while reading this issue of Southerly 7.2 Writing Through Fences— Archipelago of Letters that news emerged of the Australian government’s decision to allow some refugees in its care to resettle in New Zealand and for others to be released from a Melbourne hotel. It was as though the entire country gave a sigh of relief, attacks on the government coming thick and fast. Then the question of why it hadn’t happened sooner was overshadowed by Britain’s government announcing that it would establish an offshore processing regime with Rwanda as the linchpin. The problem of inequality had raised its head once more as another country tried to come to terms with its own attractiveness. It seems like the flow of migrants is unstoppable. Politicians’ job is to deal with it.' (Introduction)

1 Matthew Da Silva Reviews Australianama : The South Asian Odyssey in Australia by Samia Khatun Matthew Da Silva , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , no. 26 2020-2021;

— Review of Australianama : The South Asian Odyssey in Australia Suvendrini Perera , 2021 single work review

'Samia Khatun takes a tack pioneered by Peter Drew, an Australian who made posters labelled with the word “Aussie” and featuring a migrant cameleer. He wrote about the development of his art practice in ‘Poster Boy: A Memoir of Art and Politics,’ (2019). It’s a slightly confused account of a life spent looking for battles to fight. Khatun fights her own battle but uses different language and aims stronger barbs at a long-absent colonial power.' (Introduction)

1 Matthew Da Silva Reviews Jungle Without Water by Sreedhevi Iyer Matthew Da Silva , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 24 2019;

— Review of Jungle Without Water and Other Stories Sreedhevi Iyer , 2017 selected work short story

'The good things in this collection of short stories, Jungle Without Water, are very good indeed. But before talking about some of them in detail I want to briefly touch on the major theme of this book, which is the migrant experience in many of its different phases. In each of the stories mentioned in this review the main subject of the work is the way that people fit into society when they, or their antecedents, come from somewhere else. In some of the stories the main characters are people from India living in Malaysia but the title story, for example, takes as its subject an Indian student living in Brisbane, in Australia.'  (Introduction)

1 Matthew Da Silva Reviews Rain Birds by Harriet McKnight Matthew Da Silva , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , March no. 23 2019;

— Review of Rain Birds Harriet McKnight , 2017 single work novel

'Harriet McKnight’s brilliant, moving novel reminded me of a book I had read a long time before, in 2006. That was Kate Legge’s The Unexpected Elements of Love, a novel that explores some of the same themes that McKnight incorporates into her 2017 novel: namely, dementia and climate change. Another that McKnight works into her book is the theme of domestic violence, and she also touches on racism especially (but not exclusively) as it relates to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations.' (Introduction)

1 On the Way to New England i "Hugging the huge bulk of the continent", Matthew Da Silva , 2014 single work poetry
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 74 no. 1 2014; (p. 128)
1 Archer Russell : Australia's Unknown Literary Great Matthew Da Silva , 2011 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Geographic [Website] , November 2011;
'He literally wrote the book on solitary bushwhacking in the 20th century. Meet Archer Russell.'
1 Peter Carey's Oscar and Lucinda Matthew Da Silva , 1989 single work criticism
— Appears in: Outrider : A Journal of Multicultural Literature in Australia , December vol. 6 no. 2 1989; (p. 148-159)
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