Issue Details: First known date: 2002... no. 24 2002 The Lu Rees Archives Notes, Books and Authors
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2002 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Laurie Copping : 1 June 1920-7 September 2003, Julie Long , Belle Y. Alderman , single work obituary
Describes Laurie Copping's energetic involvements with teaching, community service and family, and with children's literature, including key roles with the Children's Book Council of Australia.
(p. 5-6)
Some Thoughts on Australian Folkloric Tradition, Bill Scott , single work essay
Author and folklorist Bill Scott believes that modern Australian life and literature shows little evidence of migrant cultures, despite our history of immigrants. Rather, he says, they reflect a 'recognisably Australian' ethos with its roots in colonial life, as well as a stream of indigenous cultures and folklore.
(p. 7-9)
Mixing Metaphors - Combining European, Vietnamese and Indigenous Mythology in Fiction, Hoa Pham , single work essay
Hoa Pham discusses some key elements of her novel Vixen which draws on the mythologies of different cultures to tell a feminist story.
(p. 10-12)
Lu Rees Fellowship 2001, Julie Bradley , single work essay
Julie Bradley describes the enriching experience of being the inaugural Lu Rees Archives Fellow in 2001, so enabling her to use the collection of children's literature as a 'point of reference and inspiration' for her own artwork.
(p. 13-16)
Joan Margaret Phipson : Author : 16 November 1912-2 April 2003, Rosemary Dobson , single work obituary
Describes the literary career and world of children's novelist Joan Phipson, who saw the dominant theme of her own work as 'man's relationship with the earth he lives on and with the universe about him.'
(p. 17-19)
The Highs, the Lows, and the Winds that Blow Through the Life of a Children's Writer : or, How Do You Know if You've Written a Classic?, Mem Fox , single work column
The text of the inaugural Walter McVitty lecture given by children's author Mem Fox in Canberra, 2002. She discusses some of the challenges and joys of writing for children, especially the very young, particularly in her book for babies, Where is the Green Sheep? (2004).
(p. 20-25)
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