y separately published work icon Idiom 23 periodical  
... Idiom 23
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

Idiom 23 is dedicated to developing the literary arts throughout the Central Queensland region and includes original short stories, poems and articles from national and international writers. It began life as a magazine produced by a small group of Central Queensland University staff and students. It accepts contributions from poets, short story writers and reviewers from the broader commumnity. Idiom 23 is produced with the support of the School of Contemporary Communications, University of Central Queensland.

Notes

  • Price: AUD 20 subscription per year (effective 1998)
  • Frequency: Semi-annually
  • Range: 1988-
  • Indexed comprehensively until 2014 . Due to resourcing issues, this periodical will no longer be comprehensively indexed.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

‘Is Boggabilla Where Bill Takes a Dump?’ Writing an Australian Literary Regionalism : Stories and Poetry Published in Idiom 23 Literary Magazine, 2016–2018 Nicole Anae , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , June no. 54 2019;
'This article aims to explore the representation of what I argue identifies an Australian literary regionalism in stories and poetry published in Idiom 23, Central Queensland University’s literary magazine, over the past three issues, 2016–2018. As editor of Idiom 23 during this time, I have detected in the contemporary writing of regional contributors a heightening interest in expressing a unique sense of place and history through literary elements including, but not limited to, an emphasis on local colour and characterisation, rurality and regional settings, and personal stories of time and place, as well as an idiomatic interest in literary tropes accentuating colloquialisms, regional traditions, dialogic ‘play’, personal and familial histories, Indigenous identity, and distinctive ways of mapping, representing, articulating, and celebrating cultural belonging. Exploring how contributions to Central Queensland University’s Idiom 23 literary magazine over the past three issues, 2016–2018, construct a sense of regionalism and regional identity offers rich potential to not only identify the narratives, stories, or voices ‘naturally’ arising in regional writing practices, but also how perceptions of regionality impact on the ways regional writing is itself expressed through a unique form of Australian literary regionalism.' (Publication abstract)
‘Is Boggabilla Where Bill Takes a Dump?’ Writing an Australian Literary Regionalism : Stories and Poetry Published in Idiom 23 Literary Magazine, 2016–2018 Nicole Anae , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , June no. 54 2019;
'This article aims to explore the representation of what I argue identifies an Australian literary regionalism in stories and poetry published in Idiom 23, Central Queensland University’s literary magazine, over the past three issues, 2016–2018. As editor of Idiom 23 during this time, I have detected in the contemporary writing of regional contributors a heightening interest in expressing a unique sense of place and history through literary elements including, but not limited to, an emphasis on local colour and characterisation, rurality and regional settings, and personal stories of time and place, as well as an idiomatic interest in literary tropes accentuating colloquialisms, regional traditions, dialogic ‘play’, personal and familial histories, Indigenous identity, and distinctive ways of mapping, representing, articulating, and celebrating cultural belonging. Exploring how contributions to Central Queensland University’s Idiom 23 literary magazine over the past three issues, 2016–2018, construct a sense of regionalism and regional identity offers rich potential to not only identify the narratives, stories, or voices ‘naturally’ arising in regional writing practices, but also how perceptions of regionality impact on the ways regional writing is itself expressed through a unique form of Australian literary regionalism.' (Publication abstract)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

ISSN: 1032-1640
Last amended 16 Apr 2020 07:14:58
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X