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ABR’s inaugural
poetry prize
Australia boasts several worthy poetry prizes, but the inaugural
ABR Poetry Prize is one of the most lucrative: the author
of the winning poem will earn $2000. The other short-listed poems
will each receive $200, as well as being published in the March
2004 issue — one month before we announce the winner. Often, in
poetry competitions, suites of poems are eligible, and the effect
can be to privilege a group of poems over the shorter, discrete
poem. Our prize is limited to a single poem of no more than 100
lines. Poets are invited to enter as many works as they like. Once
again, ABR subscribers receive a $10 discount off the entry
fee. Guidelines and entry form appear on page 17. (You can also
download them from our website.) Entries close on December 15, so
we know how our three judges will be spending the summer.
Meanwhile, on the reviewing front …
Entries have now closed for this year’s ABR Reviewing Competition.
We thank all our entrants and look forward to reading their submissions.
In the December/January issue, we will announce the winners in all
three categories: fiction, non-fiction and children’s literature.
They will each win $500, plus publication and a future commission.
A month of biographies
Each year, it seems to rain biography, and we review several of
them in this and coming issues. How fitting, then, that Peter Porter
(himself the subject of a biography: Bruce Bennett’s Spirit in
Exile, 1991) should be back in Australia to deliver this year’s
National Biography Award Annual Lecture. His theme is biography
in poetry, and the title of his lecture is ‘The Observed of All
Observers’. (We’ll present an autographed copy of Mr Porter’s new
collection, Afterburner, to the first person who can name
the play from which this phrase is drawn.) Mr Porter will deliver
his lecture twice: first in Sydney, at the State Library of New
South Wales, on October 6; then at the State Library of Victoria,
on October 12. You will need to book for both, so consult the advertisement
on page 59 for more details. Meanwhile, the National Biography Award
(so generously financed by Dr Geoff Cains) is on again this year.
Entries close on October 22. Once again, the award is worth $15,000.
More details and the entry form are available at: www.sl.nsw.gov.au/awards/biog.cfm.
Indexing The Argus
La Trobe University has been indexing The Argus for longer
than most newspapers and magazines remain in print. Dr John Hirst,
Reader in History and a noted media commentator himself, began the
task in 1984, and has been directing the indexing of The Argus,
which appeared in Melbourne from 1846 to 1955. To date he has attracted
a team of readers and researchers, who are compiling an index of
the news content of the paper from 1860 to 1909, not uninteresting
decades in our history, as Dr Hirst well knows, having written The
Sentimental Nation: The Making of the Australian Commonwealth (2000).
Dr Hirst has discovered much colourful primary material: ‘For example,
there is a news story about a man pretending to be Ned Kelly demanding
free drinks at a pub and another about a bank manager who killed
himself with a pistol issued to him to protect him from the Kelly
Gang.’ He hopes the project will be completed by 2010, not long
after La Trobe University opens its new city campus, aptly in the
massive old Argus Building on Elizabeth Street. And when the index
is finished, and promulgated? ‘Australia will have an equivalent
resource to The Times Index in Britain or The New York
Times Index in the US,’ says Dr Hirst. New readers and volunteers
will assist his cause, so if you are interested in helping, ring
him on (03) 9479 2369.
Remembering the republic
At least one historian hasn’t abandoned all hope of an Australian
republic. Larissa Behrendt reviews Mark McKenna’s book This Country:
A Reconciled Republic? in this issue. Neal Blewett (author and
former politician and diplomat) will also have something to say
on the subject on October 26, when he will deliver the 2004 Henry
Parkes Oration at the National Library of Australia. His theme is
‘A Republican President or a Presidential Republic?’ This is a free
event, commencing at 6 p.m., but bookings are essential: (02) 6262
1122.
Rathcoola calling
The poet Andrew Sant has apprised ‘Advances’ of an auspicious new
residency that is available to writers and artists living in Australia
or New Zealand who would like to pursue their work in Ireland. Each
year, the successful applicant will spend six months (commencing
in either January or July) in an apartment in Rathcoola, Donoughmore,
which, for the geographically challenged, is about thirty kilometres
north-west of Cork. As well as accommodation, studio space and the
use of a car, he or she will receive a stipend equivalent to A$20,000
and a return airfare to Cork. Rathcoola, a large country house built
in 1752, is named after the river that runs through the property.
It is set in substantial grounds and has a walled garden with ancient
apple trees. (Andrew Sant advises us that there are pubs and villages
nearby if the golden apples of the sun don’t suffice.) This admirable
residency has been created by the Richard and Sophie Nicoll Trust,
based in London, and will be advertised annually in October. Those
interested should consult the website: www.rathcoola.info.
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