Some insightful reflections on the Australian obsession with suburbia, Indigenous place names, and constitutional reform, but on the whole, the prose was dominated by a dry academic register. The best essays were exceptionally researched, while lacking the strong voice I expected from a literary journal.
I hope a rich reader disagrees with me enough to save Meanjin...
This essay collection and I have been in an intimate spat for a week now. Some of the essays were brilliant, other were so dull that I spent a good amount of time wondering why they were chosen for this collection at all. That being said, I can appreciate the diverse range of choices along the spectrum of Meanjin’s existence as a journal. Nothing crazier than reading an essay written right at the end of WW2 and then an essay written in 2023 regarding the Palestinian genocide.
My favourites are as follows: 1. Always bet on Black (power) by Chelsea Watego 2. It’s shit to be White by Michael Mohammed Ahmad 3. The act of disappearing by Amy McQuire 4. The Cultural Cringe by Arthur Phillips
Tony Birch, Chelsea Watego, Michael Mohammed Ahmad and Amy McQuire’s were hands down my favourite essays in this collection, they indeed were essays that changed so-called Australia.