A wide-ranging consideration of the struggle between nature and culture in Australia, evident in its cities. The article discusses writing by D.H.Lawrence, Murray Bail, Les Murray, Peter Carey, Ada Cambridge and many others and focuses on Sydney
Sydney has been shaped by tourism but in a large metropolis, where tourist experiences so often over...
Early draft of an article on Henry Lawson, never published. Contains a review of Henry Lawson’s lite...
There are (at least!) two remarkable things about Australia: one is that it is the driest inhabited&...
Taking a cue from T.S. Eliot's 'The Wasteland' this article considers the different attitudes to the...
ABSTRACT Australia is a suburban nation, with 85 percent of the 20 million people clinging to the co...
When I began to study Australian history the idea that there was anything worth saying about our cit...
The article surveys Australian poets and composers from Barron Field and Henry Handel Richardson to ...
The current drought in Australia raises questions about the extent to which urban life depends on ph...
There is a strong, though not uncontested view, that a tradition of ‘place’ or ‘nature’ writing has,...
The article argues that American popular culture's glamorising of the city has influenced Australian...
At the heart of this exegesis is the city-bush gap and the rivalry and stereotypes that gap has gene...
In everything from wilderness documentaries and ecotourism developments to the advertising of real e...
Since the 1960s, the defence of nature in Australia has been predominantly and explicitly organised ...
Our answer, to the question: Is the natural history of Sydney so camouflaged that it will not surviv...
Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland, has catapulted from a small, provincial town to a larger m...
Sydney has been shaped by tourism but in a large metropolis, where tourist experiences so often over...
Early draft of an article on Henry Lawson, never published. Contains a review of Henry Lawson’s lite...
There are (at least!) two remarkable things about Australia: one is that it is the driest inhabited&...
Taking a cue from T.S. Eliot's 'The Wasteland' this article considers the different attitudes to the...
ABSTRACT Australia is a suburban nation, with 85 percent of the 20 million people clinging to the co...
When I began to study Australian history the idea that there was anything worth saying about our cit...
The article surveys Australian poets and composers from Barron Field and Henry Handel Richardson to ...
The current drought in Australia raises questions about the extent to which urban life depends on ph...
There is a strong, though not uncontested view, that a tradition of ‘place’ or ‘nature’ writing has,...
The article argues that American popular culture's glamorising of the city has influenced Australian...
At the heart of this exegesis is the city-bush gap and the rivalry and stereotypes that gap has gene...
In everything from wilderness documentaries and ecotourism developments to the advertising of real e...
Since the 1960s, the defence of nature in Australia has been predominantly and explicitly organised ...
Our answer, to the question: Is the natural history of Sydney so camouflaged that it will not surviv...
Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland, has catapulted from a small, provincial town to a larger m...
Sydney has been shaped by tourism but in a large metropolis, where tourist experiences so often over...
Early draft of an article on Henry Lawson, never published. Contains a review of Henry Lawson’s lite...
There are (at least!) two remarkable things about Australia: one is that it is the driest inhabited&...