'This chapter considers how the perennial Australian concern of how to capture and contain the distinctive national landscape on stage has manifested in the period between 2007 and 2020. Analyses of three plays follow: Broken (2016) by Mary Anne Butler, Angus Cerini’s The Bleeding Tree (2016), and Leah Purcell’s adaptation of the iconic Henry Lawson short story The Drover’s Wife (2017). Across each case study, we are also drawn to the distinctive language that is deployed in these rural and regional settings from playwrights deeply familiar with the country they’re evoking on stage: a process of ‘writing from within.’ A duologue between Butler and Cerini follows, which takes up the question of what it means to write from the regions in contemporary Australia.' (Publication abstract)