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How to Be Between
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

How to Be Between

Young women’s bodies are relentlessly scrutinised and judged, so for most, the appearance of facial hair is a traumatic experience – unnatural, unfeminine, unwanted. But what happens when a female-assigned person decides to embrace their facial hair? In How to Be Between, Bastian Fox Phelan explores how something as seemingly trivial as facial hair can act as a catalyst for a never-ending series of questions about the self. What happens when we accept our bodies as they are? What freedoms are gained by deciding to pursue an authentic sense of self, and what are the costs? As Bastian navigates adolescence and young adulthood, they meet many people who ask, ‘Who, or what, are you?’ 'Ho...

For the Record(er)
  • Language: en

For the Record(er)

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Thank You for Your Love
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 34

Thank You for Your Love

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2011
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

How to be Alone
  • Language: en

How to be Alone

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2012
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

HEAT Series 3 Number 4
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 101

HEAT Series 3 Number 4

‘If I wanted stillness, I’d build a bungalow,’ writes Ella Jeffery in 'Supertall', a poem that envisions life in 432 Park, the world’s tallest residential building. HEAT Series 3 Number 4 explores the tensions between house and home, nature and suburbia, earth and outer space. Clare Murphy uses the language of plants to tell a thorny story of urban development. A series of photographs by Yanni Florence reveal hidden images on city streets. Irish writer David Hayden shares a filmic vision of the Sydney suburbs in his short story ‘Marrickville Light’. Two poets, Ella Skilbeck-Porter and Ella Jeffery contemplate cats and real estate. And Luke Beesley and Amy Leach go further afield, conjuring worlds that sit somewhere between the real and the imaginary.

Routledge Companion to Creativity and the Built Environment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 611

Routledge Companion to Creativity and the Built Environment

This book crtitically examines the reciprocal relationship between creativity and the built environment and features leading voices from across the world in a debate on originating, learning, modifying, and plagiarizing creativities within the built environment. The Companion includes contributions from architecture, design, planning, construction, real estate, economics, urban studies, geography, sociology, and public policies. Contributors review the current field and proposes new conceptual frameworks, research methodologies, and directions for research, policy, and practice. Chapters are organised into five sections, each drawing on cross-disciplinary insights and debates: Section I conn...

HEAT Series 3 Number 3
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 93

HEAT Series 3 Number 3

‘I welcome the return of HEAT. Writers and readers alike will revel in its daring audacity, bold exploration and innovative celebration of literature.’ — Alexis Wright Bringing together new and established voices, HEAT Series 3 Number 3 roams the world, taking us from Cambridge to Canberra via Mexico. Among the contributors are Aniela Rodríguez, with a piercing tale of biblical revenge translated by Elizabeth Bryer, Kate Crowcroft, sharing an essay on the history of the tongue, and Madeleine Watts, contributing a story of desire and withholding. As ever, HEAT Series 3 Number 3 features writing that is moving and impactful, both independently and as an ensemble. First published in 1996...

HEAT Series 3 Number 8
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 113

HEAT Series 3 Number 8

Some things have nothing in common until you put them together, says artist and collector Patrick Pound about his series of found photographs in our latest issue. The writers in HEAT Series 3 Number 8 seem similarly drawn to overlooked meaning. In ‘Shopping’, a short story by Katerina Gibson, a young arts worker in Melbourne overcomes an obsession with designer clothing. The late Hong Kong writer Xi Xi, in a work of autobiographical fiction, processes a cancer diagnosis. Essayist Cameron Hurst finds herself attending a meeting of the Victorian Spiritualists’ Union after reading Henry Handel Richardson. And poets Judith Beveridge and Paul Muldoon transform unassuming animals, people and...

HEAT Series 3 Number 9
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 92

HEAT Series 3 Number 9

First published in 1996, HEAT is a literary magazine dedicated to publishing essays, fiction, and poetry by Australian and overseas writers of the highest quality. Recent contributors include Eda Gunaydin, Noémi Lefebvre, Gareth Morgan, Jenny Erpenbeck, Oliver Driscoll, Mary Jean Chan, Amitava Kumar, Fiona Wright, Oscar Schwartz, Zang Di, Hanne Ørstavik, Katharina Volckmer, Kate Middleton, and Noëlle Janaczewska. HEAT’s third series (2022–) is edited by Alexandra Christie and designed by award-winning designer Jenny Grigg. Recent praise for HEAT: 'The revival of HEAT journal has been one of the high points of the year. In the 1990s and 2000s, HEAT was the most exciting, forward-lookin...

Tincture Journal Issue Nine (Autumn 2015)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 229

Tincture Journal Issue Nine (Autumn 2015)

Tincture Journal is a quarterly literary journal based in Sydney, Australia and collecting interesting new works of fiction, poetry and non-fiction from Australia and the world.