y separately published work icon Griffith Review periodical issue  
Alternative title: Wicked Problems, Exquisite Dilemmas
Issue Details: First known date: 2011... no. 32 Autumn 2011 of Griffith Review est. 2003- Griffith Review
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Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2011 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Missing Personsi"Peacetime or war", Craig Sherborne , single work poetry (p. 47)
Daughters of the Revolution, Wendy McCarthy , single work autobiography (p. 48-57)
Dying, Laughing, Susan Johnson , single work short story (p. 58-64)
The Flood, Matthew Condon , single work essay (p. 73-85)
Mud, Mud Glorious Mud, Deb Newell , single work autobiography (p. 86-90)
Too Blue, John Van Tiggelen , single work prose travel (p. 110-121)
Five Across : Puzzle, Morris Lurie , single work short story (p. 255-259)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

The Past Is Not Sacred : A Dangerous Obsession with Anzac Peter Cochrane , 2015 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , April no. 48 2015; (p. 13-24)

'THE TERM ‘HISTORY wars’ is best known in Australia for summing up the fierce debate over the nature and extent of frontier conflict, with profound implications for the legitimacy of the British settlement and thus for national legitimacy today.

'That debate, though hardly resolved, is now taking something of a back seat to a public controversy focused on Australia’s wars of the twentieth century and particularly on the war of 1914–18, called the Great War until the Second World War redefined it as the First.' (Introduction)

The Past Is Not Sacred : A Dangerous Obsession with Anzac Peter Cochrane , 2015 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , April no. 48 2015; (p. 13-24)

'THE TERM ‘HISTORY wars’ is best known in Australia for summing up the fierce debate over the nature and extent of frontier conflict, with profound implications for the legitimacy of the British settlement and thus for national legitimacy today.

'That debate, though hardly resolved, is now taking something of a back seat to a public controversy focused on Australia’s wars of the twentieth century and particularly on the war of 1914–18, called the Great War until the Second World War redefined it as the First.' (Introduction)

Last amended 13 Jan 2012 11:39:24
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