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The current issue of Meanjin is a forthright one. In her editorial, Sally Heath singles out the contributions of Marcia Langton and Darren Siwes, and with good reason: their work typifies the issue. Siwes has given the journal its cover, and his choice of image – a coin depicting an Indigenous head of state in the year 2041 – makes its point. The cornerstone of the issue is, however, ‘Reading the Constitution out Loud’, a thorough and level-headed essay by Langton on Julia Gillard’s promise to hold a referendum on the recognition of Indigenous Australians in the Constitution. Langton, a member of the government’s inquiry panel, whose matter-of-fact style leads the way for the rest of theissue, asks, ‘how can we sustain the opportunity for a referendum […] in circumstances that are not riven by “dog whistle” issues in the racialist Australian politics that arise with each electoral season?’ The question cannot be ignored, nor easily answered.
- Book 1 Title: Meanjin, Vol. 70, No. 4
- Book 1 Biblio: Melbourne University Publishing, $24.99 pb, 208 pp
Elsewhere, Christopher Hodges has written an historically illuminating article on the Papunya Tula Artists who inaugurated their group over forty years ago, establishing a model for Australia’s Indigenous artists. In his article, ‘Offence Goes Viral’, Richard King makes a case for tolerance, particularly in the face of the things we find most offensive, closing with the suggestion that ‘free speech is meaningless unless it means the freedom to offend’. And Ivor Indyk, writing both as a publisher and bibliophile, in his essay, ‘The Book and Its Time’, weighs up exactly what the future holds for books, both those in his personal library and those that have not yet been written, in the face of unlimited digital storage. Other highlights are essays by Alex Miller and Peter Pierce, fiction by David Mence and Josephine Rowe, and poetry by Nathan Curnow, Michelle Cahill, and Rose Lucas.
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