The Collected Verse of Mary Gilmore


Book Description

This book brings together, for the first time, the works of Australia's foremost female poet of the first half of the twentieth century.It features a dedicated mailing and e-mail campaign to targeted poetry related media & organisations.With unrivalled access to Gilmore's work, this superb volume features more than 500 previously unpublished poems.Mary Gilmore is considered by many to have been Australia's foremost female poet of the first half of the twentieth century.This superb volume brings together all her poems - from 1887 to 1929 - and presents readers with an unrivalled and enlightening view of a poet who was able to demonstrate radical political ideals, whilst at the same time be praised for the 'womanliness' of works such as Marri'd and Other Verses and The Passionate Heart.For the first time, these poems stand side by side, presenting readers with a truly revealing picture of Gilmore's oeuvre.




The Collected Verse of Mary Gilmore


Book Description

This book brings together, for the first time, the works of Australia's foremost female poet of the first half of the twentieth century.It features a dedicated mailing and e-mail campaign to targeted poetry related media & organisations.With unrivalled access to Gilmore's work, this superb volume features more than 500 previously unpublished poems.Mary Gilmore is considered by many to have been Australia's foremost female poet of the first half of the twentieth century.This superb volume brings together all her poems - from 1887 to 1929 - and presents readers with an unrivalled and enlightening view of a poet who was able to demonstrate radical political ideals, whilst at the same time be praised for the 'womanliness' of works such as Marri'd and Other Verses and The Passionate Heart.For the first time, these poems stand side by side, presenting readers with a truly revealing picture of Gilmore's oeuvre.




Good for the Soul


Book Description

In his first days as Prime Minister, John Curtin presented himself to the press as a self-styled intellectual who loved sport and relaxing, when he could, with a book, beach walk, game of cards or fossick in the garden. He also revealed that he enjoyed poetry so much that he held to a Sunday night poetry ritual. Curtin was Australia's third wartime Prime Minister, Labor's eighth Prime Minister, and the first Prime Minister from a Western Australian electorate. 'Toby Davidson reveals a new perspective on John Curtin: the poetry of his times, and the poems he himself read. As Davidson shows, Curtin's poetry reading and his reflections upon it influenced his thoughts and language from his socialist youth to the last days of his leadership of a nation transformed by global peril. Good for the Soul: John Curtin's Life with Poetry is a unique, patiently researched and fascinating re-evaluation of Australia's revered wartime Prime Minister.' – John Edwards, author of John Curtin's War Volume I & II 'A stunningly comprehensive account which shows a side of John Curtin we have only glimpsed before. Davidson skilfully traces how poetry was Curtin's companion and ally from his humble beginnings in rural Victoria to his death in office in 1945, two months before the end of World War II.' – Professor David Black, editor of In His Own Words: John Curtin's Speeches and Writings and Friendship is a Sheltering Tree: John Curtin's Letters 1907 to 1945.




The Collected Verse of Mary Gilmore


Book Description

AU Author. Mary Gilmore was Australia's foremost woman poet during the first half of the twentieth century and it was as a poet that she wanted to be remembered when she died in 1962. More attention however has been given in recent years to her long and eventful life, her role as feminist, her championing of Australian literature as an instrument of national identity and her activism for various forms of social justice. This two-volume edition honours her wishes by bringing together for the first time all of Mary Gilmore's copious published poetry. Volume one covers the period from 1887 to 1929. These poems reflect her affiliation to the Bulletin in the value placed on pioneering bush traditions, the Australian working man, and the ANZAC tradition, but are also vitally and distinctively interested in the roles and rights of women.




The Cambridge Companion to Australian Literature


Book Description

This book introduces in a lively and succinct way the major writers, literary movements, styles and genres that, at the beginning of a new century, are seen as constituting the field of 'Australian literature'. The book consciously takes a perspective that sees literary works not as aesthetic objects created in isolation by unique individuals, but as cultural products influenced and constrained by the social, political and economic circumstances of their times, as well as by geographical and environmental factors. It covers indigenous texts, colonial writing and reading, poetry, fiction and theatre throughout two centuries, biography and autobiography, and literary criticism in Australia. Other features of the companion are a chronology listing significant historical and literary events, and suggestions for further reading.




A Concise History of Australia


Book Description

This fourth edition investigates the key factors - social, economic and political - that continue to shape modern-day Australia.




Courage a Grace


Book Description

A detailed biography of Dame Mary Gilmore's life which spanned the period 1890-1962.




Three Radicals


Book Description




Randolph Stow: Critical Essays


Book Description

Randolph Stow (1935–2010) was a writer who resisted critical containment. His complete oeuvre of eight novels, a children's novella, a libretto, translation work and several collections of poetry presents an accomplished and impressive literary legacy. The collection republishes a number of significant essays but also presents new readings acknowledging the remarkable skill as well as the limitations of Stow's literary imagining. All are a testimony to the resonance of Stow's writing while acknowledging the critical complexities of his work. 'Commencing this project with the simple ambition to present a critical collection responding to the full breadth of Randolph Stow's work, I extended an invitation to literary scholars and critics whose work I knew addressed his writing. The responses were encouraging and generous, confirming the wide reach of interest in Stow's life and literature. It reminded me that while not as comprehensively studied as some of his contemporaries, Stow continues to enjoy the support of broad public and academic readership.' — Kate Rendell