'IN THE FIRST months of 2020, the vibrations of the Earth changed. As monitored by a global network of seismologists, the average daily displacement of the surface of the planet – measured in nanometres, or increments of one billionth of a metre – fell around the world, from Nepal to Barcelona to Brussels. In Enshi, in China’s Hubei province, and in New York City, average ground displacement fell to less than one nanometre from pre-pandemic levels of 3.25 nm and 1.75 nm respectively'. (Ashley Hay : Introduction)
Only literary material within AustLit's scope individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:
mental health Lifting the iron curtain around care by Patrick McGorry
Surviving Covid Trophy guide and walkthrough by Beau Windon
Psychiatry and the socio-political order : Where mental health meets human rights by Neeraj S Gill
Love and fear Towards an Australian model of psychedelic mental health by Kate Cole-Adams
Nursing the economy Coming back from Covid by Steven Kennedy and Shane Wright
Decolonising psychology : Why voice matters by Pat Dudgeon, Dawn Darlaston-Jones and Joanna Alexi
The sad stats : The trauma of community law by Sam Elkin
The chemical question Mapping the brain-biology frontier by Bianca Nogrady
Our once and future home : Journeying with the climate pilgrims by David Ritter
Delusions of sanity : Deconstructing madness in an insane world by Samuel Alexander
Going sane : Creative terminologies for challenging times by Tanmoy Goswami
The privatisation of anxiety : Wellness, self-help and the resilience doctrine by Angela Smith
An essay for the Griffith Review on punk, pain and a family puzzle. (Author's summary)