- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
'... embracing anger is a political act. This is not a personal project but a social one-being passive and perpetually afraid of your power reinforces the status quo, and I am no longer interested in that. Anger is a complex emotion, which is exactly why my child-brain suppresses it, and exactly why we as a society are afraid of it. Anger teaches us that not everything has to be either/or.'In a profound and personal essay, Lucia Osborne-Crowley writes on learning to embrace anger as a multi-faceted emotion. Anger can be an act of caring, anger can be a force for personal power, and inter-personal good; anger, she says, 'can sit alongside love and hope and connection rather than being their opposite.' Guy Rundle studies the rise of the Knowledge Class, the laptop tapping workers at the core of the west's new economy, and details the challenge â and opportunity â this growing group poses for traditional progressive politics. Na'ama Carlin found her first pregnancy challenging, a minefield of existential and practical complication. Then she was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer. Author Alice Pung writes on the vexed politics of 'diversity' in the Australian publishing industry. Futurist Mark Pesce is anxious about the social implications of the Facebook 'metaverse', but that's just the tip of the iceberg. Critic and curator Chris McAuliffe looks at the hidden and very complicated history of the Australian flag. El Gibbs writes on the hidden pandemic: of living with both covid and disability. Other essays from Declan Fry, Martin Langford, Gemma Carey, Madeleine Gray, Jill Giese, Bruce Buchan and more. Memoir from Alice Bishop, Alexander Wells, Dominic Gordon and Hannah Preston. New fiction from Jennifer Mills, Ouyang Yu and Christopher Raja. New poetry from Adam Aitken, Lucy Dougan, Ashleigh Synnott, Stephen Edgar, Svetlana Sterlin, Junie Huang and more. Reviews from Millie Bayliss, Imogen Dewey, Hasib Hourani, Thabani Tshuma and Rosie Ofori Ward.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Editorial
- National Accounts
- Piscine Epiphanies
- On Getting a Diagnosis
- But For a Moment There Were Your Words ...
- Forgotten Flu
- Australia in Three Books
- Necessity Has No Law
- The Child in Me
- On Grieving The Blue of the Sky
- Zu, or Part Thereof
- Nothing Good Can Come from This
- His Walking Feet
- A Flag in Common
- A Steady Gamble
- Whose Feelings Matter in Literature?
- Going Meta
- Australians All
- The Fat Bitch in Art
- Relaxation Techniques in The Adelphi Hotel
- Bloody Undies
- The Funeral
- The Firm
- Exposure
- Art On The Margins
- Seven Layers of Sleep
- Looking For Alibrandi: The Forgotten Archived Stories
- Unhappiness And Related Fields
- The Cameleer
- The Opposite of Rachel Cusk
- New Sex-Work Literature
- The Right to Subjectivity
- Letters From a Bratty Deity
- If WeâRe All The Same Bird, WeâRe Flying Forever
- Poetry Contributors