Southerly is a journal that aims to publish and promote the study of new Australian literature; “Southerly is to serve the cause of literary art, of scholarship (in its broader manifestations), of literary criticism, and, through these as well as by means of direct report and comment, of the Australian English Association” (Southerly, vol., no.1, 1939, p3). Southerly emerged with the start of Australia’s involvement in World War II; “[a] war must not mean the end or suspension of literary activity... if barbarism is to be kept in check at all, it will surely be as much by this means [the preservation of the tradition of literature] as by the opposition of force" (Southerly, vol.1, no.2, 1940, p3). It was not only the Southerly journal that had to continue through the war, but also, as Ian Buchanan Director of the Institute for Social Transformation Research at the University of Wollongong noted, ‘Critical Theory’, which would later change how literature is approached in journals across the world. Southerly publishes poetry, short stories and book reviews. With the expansion of ‘Critical Theory’ the book reviews have been replaced with critical essays and review essays.
To be a poet one needs the six P’s – the pencil, the paper, the perception, the passion, the persistence and the unshakable persuasion that the poem is in fact possible and attainable. - Grace Perry
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Some musings about Southerly
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