y separately published work icon Quadrant periodical  
Date: 2008-
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Date: 1990-1994
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Date: 1967-1974
Date: 1964-1967
Date: 1956-1963
Issue Details: First known date: 1957... 1957 Quadrant
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Notes

  • RANGE: 1956-
  • FREQUENCY: Quarterly (1956-1964); Bi-monthly (1965-1974); nine issues [became monthly in June] (1975); monthly (1976-1978); Eleven issues per year [double issue for January-February] (1979-1983, 1985); Ten issues per year [double issue for January-February and July-August] (1984, 1986- )
  • SIZE: 20cm, app. 100 pages (1956-1963); 24cm, app. 80pp (1964- )
  • PRICE: 4 shillings (1956-1959); 5 shillings (1964-1966); 50 cents (1967); 75 cents (1968-1971); $1 (Nov 1972-Oct 1975); $2 October 1976- 1978); $3 (1979-1983); $3.50 (1984-Nov 1986); $4 (Dec 1986-1991); $5 (1992-1996); $5.50 (1997); $6 (1998- June 2000); $6.50 (Jul 2000-2001); $7 (2002)
  • Selected material published within the Quadrant magazine is available on line. An archive of back issues is also available. See the Quadrant website at http://www.quadrant.org.au/magazine/archives (sighted 10/11/2008).

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

First known date: 1957

Works about this Work

Cultivating Australian Poetry through Periodicals John Hawke , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to Australian Poetry 2024; (p. 54-70)

'This chapter discusses the importance of periodicals in the development of Australian poetry. It discusses the centrality of the Bulletin to an emergent nationalist tradition, before considering the Vitalist movement through Vision and the encouragement of modernism in Stream and Angry Penguins. It argues that the academic journal Southerly reinforced an early canon of Australian poetry in the 1940s while the establishment of Overland and Quadrant represented differing political poles in the 1950s. It maps a growing sense of regional diversity through magazines like Westerly, Island, and LINQ, which would supplement Meanjin’s early focus. The chapter then outlines the support of a new generation of writers in the 1970s through Poetry Magazine, later New Poetry, and Poetry Australia. While arguing for Scripsi’s crucial role in the 1980s, the chapter points to the emergence of specialist little magazines around work, multiculturalism, and feminism. The chapter discusses how this diversity would be strengthened in the 1990s, while the emergence of online journals like Jacket and Cordite Poetry Review provided renewed vibrancy and global recognition for Australian poetry.'

Source: Abstract.

Les Murray, Literary Editor Vivian Smith , Patrick Morgan , Suzanne Edgar , Geoff Page , Diana Figgis , Katherine Spadaro , Philippa Martyr , Russell Erwin , 2019 single work column
— Appears in: Quadrant , January/February vol. 63 no. 1/2 2019; (p. 12-17)
'Les Murray has retired as Quadrant’s Literary Editor. He held the position from March 1990 until this issue. We asked some of our writers if they would like to contribute their thoughts on Les’s tenure as Literary Editor. Such is the esteem in which he is held that we were overwhelmed with responses. We print some of them here.' (Introduction)
Quadrant and Its Slide into Deluded Extremism Mike Seccombe , 2017 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Paper , 3-9 June 2017;
'Let us imagine for a moment that someone other than a member of the reactionary right had, on the official site of the media organisation for which they worked, publicly wished violent death on their ideological opponents.' (Introduction)
Manchester Bomb Should've Been Exploded on ABC’s Q&A, Quadrant's Roger Franklin Says Amanda Meade , 2017 single work column
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 24 May 2017;

'ABC demands removal of article after Roger Franklin says ‘if there had been a shred of justice that blast would have detonated in an Ultimo TV studio’ on Monday,

'The online editor of conservative publication Quadrant has said it would have been preferable for the Manchester bomb to be exploded in the ABC’s Q&A studios on Monday night, blowing up host Tony Jones and the panellists.'

Quadrant Calls Australia Council Funding Loss a Leftist 'Act of Revenge' Amanda Meade , 2016 single work column
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 16 May 2016;
A Literary Survivor Edmund Campion , 1989 single work column
— Appears in: Fremantle Arts Review , September vol. 4 no. 9 1989; (p. 10-11)
A Soviet Writers' Centre? Nyet, Comrade! Irina Dunn , 2004 single work column
— Appears in: Newswrite : The NSW Writers' Centre Magazine , May no. 137 2004; (p. 5)
Dunn responds to McGuinness's accusation that the New South Wales Writers' Centre is 'akin to the model of the old Soviet Wrtiers' Union -- and quite as political.' McGuinness's claim was contained in his editorial in Quadrant vol.48 no.4, April 2004, p.3
Paranoia, Surveillance and Literary Politics Ian Syson , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Running Wild : Essays, Fictions and Memoirs Presented to Michael Wilding 2004; (p. 267-274)

Syson investigates the background to recent attempts by right-wing journalists, historians and intellectuals (mainly in Quadrant and the Courier-Mail) to discredit some former sympathisers with socialism and communism, such as Manning Clark and Henry Reynolds. This leads to a more general discussion of the representation of Australia's history, the role Quadrant, the CIA and the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom have played in it, and the continuing impact of the Cold War on Australian politics and culture.

y separately published work icon On How I Came to Write the Lucky Country Donald Horne , Carlton : Melbourne University Press , 2006 Z1243376 2006 extract autobiography (Into The Open) This extract focuses on the formative years of Donald Horne leading up to the writing of The Lucky Country.
Quadrant's 50th Year Paddy McGuinness , 2006 single work column
— Appears in: Quadrant , March vol. 50 no. 3 2006; (p. 4)

PeriodicalNewspaper Details

ISSN: 0033-5002
Last amended 22 Feb 2021 13:38:47
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