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y separately published work icon Meanjin periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 1999... vol. 58 no. 2 1999 of Meanjin est. 1940 Meanjin
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 1999 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Ten Thousand Fucking Monkeys (after the Work of Friedrich Kittler)i"Reader, praise not the author of this book", Justin Clemens , single work poetry (p. 17)
Teaching Poetry to Buildersi"as if", E. A. Horne , single work poetry (p. 18-19)
Living Death : An Online Elegy, Hannah Fink , single work prose (p. 21-33)
Orbis Sensualium Pictis (i.m. Lukas Tomin, 1963-1995)i"slowly the leaves are calling winter into them", Louis Armand , single work poetry (p. 34-35)
A Hundred Names of the Angeli"It could have been you, the ageing bookworm", Adam Aitken , single work poetry (p. 36-37)
Out of Bounds, Dominique Hecq , single work short story (p. 38-45)
Venicei"i was told this by a wag chucking", Sudesh Mishra , single work poetry (p. 46-49)
Millefiori, Jane Watson , single work short story (p. 50-56)
The Swimmer, Kevin Brophy , single work short story

'DAY ONE : The Tulips

They enter the room and its silence enters them. The predictable motel furniture is unnaturally and watchfully still. This is one of several honeymoon suites in the long west wing that faces the sea. There are two plastic-sealed slices of dark fruit cake on a tray with a half-bottle of champagne. She goes across to the vase of tulips courtesy of the management and touches one flower so that it shivers on its stalk. He closes the door and puts the cases down. It is as if the wedding, its dinner, speeches, dancing and drinking, tears and hugs and bad but sweetly affectionate jokes have all sunk into a cold black sea. The two of them might be a couple married for more than half a century and now close at last to the end of it all.'  (Introduction)

(p. 57-65)
In the Ensuing Trial, Bernard Cohen , single work short story (p. 66-70)
Untitledi"Foot/ foot/ foot/ foot/ cracks in footpath/ step on them/ rocks/ sticks/", M. T. C. Cronin , single work poetry (p. 71-72)
Admissible (R v Seaboyer)i"Is that a meat cleaver?", M. T. C. Cronin , single work poetry (p. 73-74)
I Have Sent Countless Lettersi"To my enemy I have sent countless letters.", Greg McLaren , single work poetry (p. 75)
I Think Therapy is Good ... for Other People, Dennis Altman , single work essay (p. 88-97)
Reasons to Not Eat Meati"700 eyelashes plucked from", Peter O'Mara , single work poetry (p. 153)
Tabloid Women, Sybil Nolan , single work criticism

''The whole woman' argues that for all women's hard-won advances, many of the problems that concerned second-wave feminists are still with us and, in some cases, have grown worse. This might be a powerful argument to someone who has been around long enough to compare then with now, but it isn't a winning line to run on a generation that has grown up with a revulsion towards radical feminism. You can draw a direct link from Greer to impressive younger writers like the Australian media feminist Catharine Lumby, whose book about tabloid culture, Gotcha, has recently been published. Lumby is the quintessential postmodern girl intellectual, an Arts- Law graduate who studied the postmodern thinkers as well as the law of torts. Not unlike the young Greer, she has had two overlapping careers, one as a journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald and the Bulletin, and the other as an academic at Macquarie and Sydney Universities. Her first book. 'Bad girls: the media, Sex and Feminism in the 90's' had strong affinities with The female eunuch. It touched on some similar issues, and its approach-Lumby described it as 'roam[ing] across traditional boundaries between academic theory, reportage and journalistic polemic''-was the same as Greer's a generation before. Its cover was a raunchy send-up of the famous female torso displayed on Greer's bestseller. The book was praised, deservedly, as one of the most readable feminist works published in Australia in a very long time.' (Publisher's summary)

(p. 165-177)
Playing Ludo, Helen Cerne , single work short story (p. 178-180)
Mullowayi"Did you dream your death last night-", Geraldine McKenzie , single work poetry (p. 181)
Scenes from an Imaginary Romancei"We stumble from the car", Geraldine McKenzie , single work poetry (p. 182-183)
The Arrivali"We are a squat of guavas", Jan Owen , single work poetry (p. 184-185)
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