y separately published work icon The Conversation newspaper issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2022... 28 November 2022 of The Conversation est. 2011 The Conversation
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2022 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
What We Mean When We Say ‘Sovereignty Was Never Ceded’, Eddie Synot , single work column

'In discussing the Uluru Statement from the Heart, I will be doing something that, as a lawyer, is perhaps not best practice: I am not going to define my terms or confine my comments to the law.' (Introduction)

Editors Have Long Been Publishing’s Hidden Handmaidens – What Might We Gain If We Acknowledged Their Role?, Alice Grundy , single work column

'Editors are almost always unseen and unheard – until something goes wrong. That might be a relatively minor mistake, such as a typo – as in a cookbook that mistakenly listed “people” instead of “pepper” in a recipe. Or it could be more substantial questions about the integrity of a book’s contents.' (Introduction)   

‘It Was Devastating’ : Theatremakers on the Fallout from Their Worst Reviews, Gary Nunn , single work column

'Many directors crave critique as much as they fear it. But what happens behind the scenes after a public panning?'

Women and Girls at Risk, at the End of the World: These Subversive Short Stories Reflect Our Anxieties, Ariella Van Luyn , single work review
— Review of Cautionary Tales for Excitable Girls Anne Casey-Hardy , 2022 selected work short story ; Everything Feels like the End of the World Else Fitzgerald , 2022 selected work short story ;

'Anne Casey-Hardy’s Cautionary Tales for Excitable Girls and Else Fitzgerald’s Everything Feels like the End of the World share feminist concerns. But while both use the short-story collection to explore latent social violence and collective anxieties, they are dramatically distinct.' (Introduction)

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