y separately published work icon Overland [Online] periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2023... August 2023 of Overland [Online] est. 2011 Overland [Online]
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2023 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Alison, Katelin Farnsworth , single work short story
A Technology to Remember and Forget: André Dao’s Anam, Jenny Hedley , single work review
— Review of Anam André Dao , 2023 single work novel ;

'André Dao’s Anam is a sweeping epic composed over twelve years and spanning three generations: from Dao’s unnamed grandfather, a Catholic intellectual imprisoned for 3653 days in ­war-torn Vietnam; to his parents, whose application for refugee status was accepted by Australia, separating them from relatives resettled in France; to Dao’s rootless perambulations between all three countries plus Cambridge, where guilt and financial obligation bind him to the pursuit of a master’s in law. In the process, Anam presents questions around responsibility, inheritance and belonging as Dao searches for a home that feels like home, with partner and daughter at his side, and is instead confronted by a sense of placelessness, of time outside of time, and collected histories which refuse to yield redemptive truths.' (Introduction)

Poetry | It’s Changing / Nowi"Futurity begins now with leftovers", Jill Jones , single work poetry
Buried in Memory: Trauma and Colonial Amnesia in Ivan Sen’s Limbo, Dylan Goodluck , single work review
— Review of Limbo Ivan Sen , 2023 single work film/TV ;

'On the tail of a series of sublime and haunting Australia Crime pictures to release in the post-pandemic era, Limbo joins a canon of thoughtful, skilfully made films that present a harrowing subtext about Australian society, and the inherent violence that permeates it, focusing on the Indigenous Australian struggle for the excavation of an ongoing history of oppression by the hands of White Australia. It is written, directed, scored and shot by Ivan Sen—an Indigenous filmmaker with a pedigree of thoughtful films, such as Mystery Road (2013), Toomelah (2011), and Beneath Clouds (2002), that express the entanglements and tragedies that adopt Indigenous perspectives as well as utilising stark outback and rural settings.' (Introduction)

Verbing the Apocalypse : Alison Croggon’s Rilke, Jocelyn Deane , single work essay
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