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Books & arts
Books & arts
MUP’s book of Kells
Jim Davidson
10 March 2023
A centenary history traces the fits, starts and tensions surrounding Melbourne University Press
Books & arts
Autochrome’s intimate legacy
Richard Johnstone
9 March 2023
Enthusiasm for this early form of colour photography might have been shortlived, but it left behind many remarkable images
Books & arts
The past catches up
Graeme Dobell
7 March 2023
An Australian diplomat follows le Carré and Greene among spies and moles
Books & arts
Traces of Norman Mailer
Patrick Mullins
7 March 2023
Why did Richard Bradford bother writing his biography of the controversial American writer?
Books & arts
Twilight of the Golden Age?
Jane Goodall
1 March 2023
Quantity is trumping quality as services compete for viewers
Books & arts
Fields of gold
Andrew Ford
28 February 2023
Not everything famous musicians do is magic
Books & arts
With Edith Berry in Geneva
Hamish McDonald
21 February 2023
The real-world backdrop of Frank Moorhouse’s celebrated trilogy was alive with idealistic characters
Books & arts
On not burning out
Frances Flanagan
16 February 2023
Is the workplace malaise bigger than two organisational psychologists believe?
Books & arts
Taking it or leaving it
Richard Johnstone
15 February 2023
Can photographs unlock the past? Janet Malcolm isn’t so sure
Books & arts
Where No meets Yes
Tim Rowse
14 February 2023
Opponents of a constitutionally enshrined Voice warn of many of the features that most attract its proponents
Books & arts
Appointment with death
Nick Haslam
6 February 2023
How best should we cope with our awareness of death — and a desire to control when it happens?
Books & arts
Captains unpicked
Judith Brett
3 February 2023
What impact do biographies of living politicians have on their subjects?
Books & arts
Mr Sibelius’s feeling for snow
Andrew Ford
3 February 2023
Does music
really
reflect its place of composition?
Books & arts
A dictionary for the future
Michael Dillon
1 February 2023
The
Gija Dictionary
opens a window on the sophisticated culture of the people of the East Kimberley
Books & arts
One-man intelligence network
Stephen Mills
1 February 2023
For a remarkable quarter-century, Tony Eggleton was the power behind the Liberal throne
Books & arts
Lies, damned lies, and data
Danielle Wood
30 January 2023
Wrong, misleading or beside the point: bad data is bad for policymaking — and examples abound
Books & arts
The war for the soul of America
Rodney Tiffen
27 January 2023
The dire state of the Republican Party has decades-old roots
Books & arts
Double-sided mirror
Martha Macintyre
25 January 2023
How anthropology flourished as colonialism began its decline
Books & arts
Is this the end of globalisation?
John Edwards
25 January 2023
A
Financial Times
columnist says yes, but the figures tell a different story
Books & arts
The beat of a different drum
Jane Goodall
24 January 2023
A fragment of Edgar Allan Poe’s prose has become a compelling psychological drama
Books & arts
Speaking to the world
Rowan Callick
21 January 2023
An account of the fluctuating fortunes of Radio Australia ends on an optimistic note
Books & arts
Why the rush?
Sarah Barns
21 January 2023
A new book about urban mobility invites us to think differently about our streets: who do they belong to, what are they for, who gets to decide?
Books & arts
With sojourns in Italy
Susan Lever
20 December 2022
How Shirley Hazzard resisted provincialism
Books & arts
Behaving badly
Jane Goodall
20 December 2022
With holidays looming, our TV critic reviews three addictive series
Books & arts
A museum’s fall guy
Hamish McDonald
20 December 2022
Why was a successful scientist and gifted artist airbrushed out of history?
Books & arts
“No one dared tell him to stop”
Matthew Ricketson
14 December 2022
In her latest post-election book Niki Savva puts Scott Morrison through the wringer. But has she avoided all the pitfalls of the genre?
Books & arts
China’s forgotten reformer
Linda Jaivin
14 December 2022
A historian rescues a former leader from the party’s airbrushers
Books & arts
Ambivalent in Arnhem Land
Gillian Cowlishaw
13 December 2022
Have a determined anthropologist and a gifted writer come to terms with how differently Yolngu do things?
Books & arts
Cometh the hour
James Walter
9 December 2022
Katharine Murphy’s latest Quarterly Essay probes where politics meets personality
Books & arts
The slow demise of neoliberalism
John Quiggin
8 December 2022
How the all-conquering movement contained the seeds of its own destruction
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