Page Title: Books + Ideas – Views & Research – The Conversation

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Page Description: Curated by professional editors, The Conversation offers informed commentary and debate on the issues affecting our world. Plus a Plain English guide to the latest developments and discoveries from the university and research sector.

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Page Text: Jennifer Ann McDonell , University of New England In his latest book, David Brooks questions human exceptionalism, drawing on the work of a wide range of thinkers and writers. Orestes Pursued by the Furies - William Adolphe Bouguereau (1862) Public domain March 31, 2022 Natalie Kon-yu , Victoria University The Furies is a devastating book, but one that hints at the possibility of redemption and reckoning. Franz Marc - Caliban: Figurine für Der Sturm von William Shakespeare (1914) Wikimedia commons March 28, 2022 Jessica White , University of South Australia The Fish is a novel about a writer’s growth to maturity, but it is also a strange story about family breakdown, difference and shame. Uluru by night with Milky Way, stars and galaxies. Taken at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Northern Territory, Central Australia. March 29, 2022 Mirani Litster , James Cook University The First Astronomers shares the extensive star knowledge of First Peoples worldwide, stretching back millennia to reclaim so-called Western discoveries and highlight the strength of oral traditions. Macierzynstwo (Motherhood) - Stanisław Wyspiański (1905) Wikimedia commons March 22, 2022 How one woman’s traumatic experience drove her investigation into pregnancy and mental health Camilla Nelson , University of Notre Dame Australia In her brave new book The Cost of Labour, Natalie Kon-yu examines the mental stresses women face in pregnancy and childbirth. Pot-bellied pigs in Lisbon Zoo. Wikimedia commons April 6, 2022 Siobhan O'Sullivan , UNSW Sydney Explicitly intended for a broad, educated audience, Guilty Pigs is an accessible work that reveals there is almost no aspect of the law that does not touch on the lives of nonhuman animals. Aboriginal Tent Embassy 50th anniversary, Old Parliament House, Canberra, 26 January 2022. Mick Tsikas/AAP March 20, 2022 Timothy Michael Rowse , Western Sydney University Anna Clark’s latest work scrutinises the role History has played in nation building and the shaping of Australian culture, but her book has an absent philosophical centre. Terry Trewin/AAP March 7, 2022 John Woinarski , Charles Darwin University John Woinarksi’s copy of this 1935 classic of environmental writing is older than him, mostly broken, much read and priceless. Steven Carroll. Tracey Nearmy/AAP March 16, 2022 The tug of the tale: Steven Carroll reimagines the life and times of T.S. Eliot and his first wife, Vivienne Kieran Dolin , The University of Western Australia The intimate connections between life and art are explored in the deeply satisfying conclusion to a quartet of novels about one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. Shutterstock March 21, 2022 Per Henningsgaard , Curtin University The sophomore effort of a writer whose debut novel was widely acclaimed is gorgeously realised, but more commercial in tone. Illustration detail from the cover of Andy Griffiths’ international bestseller, The Day My Bum Went Psycho (Pan Macmillan). March 15, 2022 Simon Ryan , Australian Catholic University A teacher was fired this month for reading his favourite picture book, I Need a New Butt, to kids. It’s an example of how US conservatives are focusing on school boards as weapons in the culture wars. The death of Jacob Frank. Wikimedia commons March 16, 2022 Isabelle Hesse , University of Sydney The Nobel Laureate’s new experimental epic is a masterful account of the life of a self-proclaimed Messiah. Shutterstock

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Complacency, conflict and dodging nuclear cataclysm: the not so great power politics of China, the US and Australia True writing is a convulsive act: inside the mind of Elena Ferrante ‘Weaponised irony’: after fictionalising Elizabeth Macarthur’s life, Kate Grenville edits her letters Colonial and nationalist myths are recast in Yumna Kassab’s Australiana The book that changed me: how a 1970s poetry collection, The Honey of Man, still brings hope in grim times ‘Cold case’ gay murders: two books illuminate Australia’s dark history of police and military violence Friday essay: empathy or division? On the science and politics of storytelling The poem as pantechnicon, the poet as polymath: John Kinsella’s boundless creativity Guide to classics: the Tibetan Book of the Dead Hidden women of history: ‘the Buzzwinker’ Ellen Miles, child convict, goldfields pickpocket and vagrant Hannah Gadsby navigates the mirror maze of trauma as an autistic, gender queer comedian Australian writing and publishing faces ‘grinding austerity’ as funding continues to decline Witchcraft and fascism collide in Jane Rawson’s imaginative new novel ‘I will not hide’: Helen Garner’s radical gift is the shock of plain-speaking Anger, grief and gradual insight in Sian Prior’s memoir Childless Kylie Moore-Gilbert’s 804 days in an Iranian prison were a travesty - but the West is in no position to lecture Love, violence and ‘class wounds’ in Thatcher-era Glasgow: what Booker winner Douglas Stuart did next 5 must-read books about Russia and Ukraine: our expert picks The book that changed me: I’m a historian but Tony Birch’s poetry opened my eyes to confronting truths about the past Guide to the classics: Immanuel Kant’s Toward Perpetual Peace and its relevance to the war in Ukraine ‘Kafkaesque’ true stories of ordinary people: inside the first days of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China If animals could speak, would we understand them? Trauma and loss define Mandy Beaumont’s unapologetically feminist debut novel There’s something fishy about Lloyd Jones’s latest novel Supernovas, auroral sounds and hungry tides: unpacking First Nations knowledge of the skies How one woman’s traumatic experience drove her investigation into pregnancy and mental health Bias, politics and protests: how human laws constrain and sometimes liberate animals Distance, dispassion and the remaking of Australian History The book that changed me: how H.H. Finlayson’s The Red Centre helped me see country – and what we have done to it The tug of the tale: Steven Carroll reimagines the life and times of T.S. Eliot and his first wife, Vivienne In Loveland, Robert Lukins explores a woman’s experience of abuse, but at times loses his way Teacher sacked for reading bum book to students: the latest conservative book ban Anti-Semitism, opportunism, and political intrigue: Olga Tokarczuk’s whirlwind tour of the 18th century Overcoming bias in the next generation: 5 unmissable Australian queer picture books Guide to the classics: Christina Stead’s The Beauties and Furies Hidden women of history: Hop Lin Jong, a Chinese immigrant in the early days of White Australia Guide to the Classics: the poetry of Rosemary Dobson Friday essay: ‘this is our library’ – how to read the amazing archive of First Nations stories written on rock Friday essay: single parenting with a disability – how my 9-year-old daughter became my carer in shining armour Friday essay: how leftist, feminist poet Dame Mary Gilmore became ‘Aunt Mary’ in the PM’s political narrative Friday essay: ‘fair game’, racial shame and the women who demanded more Friday essay: Chanel’s complex legacy Edition  Friday essays  Job Board  Events, Courses & Podcasts Most Read past week Pitch an idea Our Audience 

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