Meanjin Vol 70, No 2
Melbourne University Press
Meanjin
1st June 2011
Australia
Paperback
1
Width 157mm, Height 233mm, Spine 13mm
315g
In the June edition of Meanjin, the irrepressible Ben Pobjie takes on the topic of controversial comedy, and explains why he doesn't particularly care if you're offended. Maria Tumarkin makes a potent argument for the role of storytelling in expanding our 'moral imagination' towards asylum seekers in Australia. Way down south, Peter Timms visits Tasmania's flashiest new drawcard, and finds MONA to be "the world's first bullshit free-art museum". We bring you Annie Proulx and Tim Flannery, discussing with Stephen Romei the increasingly difficult distinction between science and art. Damon Young explores biography's crucial role in understanding not only individual lives, but the great questions of morality and mortality as well, and, in the wake of so much catastrophic weather, Alexis Wright entreats us to at last learn the lessons Indigenous cultures can teach about how we are to live in this sometimes harsh country. We include memoir from Colleen Brabender, which will permanently change your view of the person on the other side of the supermarket checkout, and Elmo Keep remembers what it was like to repeatedly not read American Psycho. We feature travel writing from Jacqueline Dutton and much, much more. There is new fiction from: David Mence, Miriam Sved, John Kinsella, Trevor Shearston and Peggy Frew, as well as new poetry from Mal McKImmie, Mark Tredinnick, Eileen Chong, Andrew Slattery and Kim Cheng Boey.
Sally Heath's first full-time job in journalism was as editor of an independent paper on the Bellarine Peninsula in Victoria about 25 years ago. Since then she has divided her time equally between writing and editing, including working as editor of the Age s A2, blogging at A Season of Sundays, and most recently joining MUP as Associate Publisher in 2010. She is Meanjin s ninth editor.