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Discordant Notes

Journal of Australian Studies 88
Bart Ziino Who Owns Gallipoli? Australia's Gallipoli Anxieties 1915-2005, Sue Lovell, 'Dew to the Soul': One Australian Artist's Response to War, Peter Kirkpatrick Hunting the Wild Reciter: Elocution and the Art of Recitation, Felicity Plunkett 'You Make Me a Dot in the Nowhere': Textual Encounters in the Australian Immigration Story (the Fourth Chapter), Bridget Griffen-Foley From the Murrumbidgee to Mamma Lena: Foreign Language Broadcasting on Australian Commercial Radio, Part I, Emily Pollnitz ...
Wednesday, 19th June 2013
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Altitude BirdIssue 44
Features reviews by Kathleen Broderick, Linn Miller, Christine Choo, Bill Thorpe, David Ritter, Eve Vincent, Stephanie Bishop, Alison Miles, Richard Kay, Amanda Day, Bernard Whimpress, Mads Clausen, Marion May Campbell, Sylvia Alston, Catie Gilchrist, Eva Chapman, Lucy Dougan, Stephen Lawrence and Nathanael O'Reilly. Click here for more details.


Altitude

Altitude BirdPopular Music: Practices, Formations and Change - Australian Perspectives
The papers collected here in this special edition of Altitude offer a brief snapshot of popular music research broadly connected with Australia. The essays demonstrate the variety of theoretical and methodological approaches used by researchers in the fields of popular music studies and cultural studies to explore themes of popular music practice, formation and change in an Australian context. Click here for more details.



 
 
 
 

Off the Rails: The Pauline Hanson Trip (2nd Edition)

By Margo Kingston, Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 2001, 243 pages, paperback, $19.95. Reviewed by Paul Reynolds in the Dec 2001-Jan 2002 issue.

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This book was widely and favourably reviewed when the first edition came out in 1999. Margo Kingston was one of only two reporters who was permanently assigned to Pauline Hanson's 1998 federal election campaign. This then is the story behind the story of how Hanson and One Nation fared. Although many other journalists flocked in and out of One Nation coverage as her comments and style inevitably provoked interest, the author was the one with continuity and has given a very perceptive account of her experiences.

The perspective the reader needs to bring to bear is that, in 1996 Hanson won Oxley as an independent but by 1998 was trying to win Blair, a newly created seat as Oxley had been redistributed against her. Amazingly she was not a senate candidate as this would have given her a clear victory. One Nation's senate candidate, Heather Hill, although winning, was barred from taking her seat owing to her dual citizenship. The number two candidate was then pronounced the winner and never heard from again.

However it is not Hanson-as-candidate that is Kingston's primary focus but Hanson-as-leader. Indeed Hanson was rarely in Blair as she was behaving as any fully fledged leader, barnstorming the nation, announcing policy and generally pressing the flesh, charming supporters and enraging opponents. But here is the critical difference. Other leaders are now so totally scripted, minded, kept under wraps and distanced from reality that the gladiatorial, presidential contests have an air of artificiality, an unreal and unrealisable attempt to connect leader to voter, perception to reality, image to truth.

None of this applied to Hanson in 1998. She was not cossetted, scripted or minded out of reality. She was on her own with a small group who had none of the media skills of the advisers with other leaders. These were amateurs trying to be professionals. The upside was that Hanson had far more contact with voters; the downside was that the campaign lurched from crisis to catastrophe as the leader and her people made it up as they went along. Had the egregious David Oldfield consistently been with her there may have been greater coherence but he was (as is now all too apparent) running his own agenda. So the leader batted alone and lost.

Kingston does more than provide an interesting chronicle. She discusses a central dilemma she faced. A journalist covering such an event has to keep his/her distance from the subject. That is easy to do for those on the Liberal, Labor or National caravans because access is screened, regulated, controlled. However in the Hanson case this did not occur. Not only did Kingston become much closer, Hanson often asked for advice, opinions, reactions. While Kingston had no time for Hanson's views, she tried for balance but this became harder as the campaign progressed, time lengthened and the women came to know each other better. Perhaps the book then was a way for Kingston to put the experience in perspective, for her readers, but more importantly, for herself.

She writes clearly and entertainingly. While it is a slightly off centre account of the 1998 election campaign (given the nature of her assignment) the theme of media/politician: journalist/leader relation is ongoing. This may well give greater durability to Off the Rails than one account of a previous election campaign.

Citation

  • Paul Reynolds. 'Review: Off the Rails: The Pauline Hanson Trip (2nd Edition) by Margo Kingston' [online]. Network Review of Books (Perth, Australian Public Intellectual Network), Dec 2001-Jan 2002. Availability: <please cite the web address here> ISSN 1833-0932. [accessed 19 June 2013].

Back Cover Blurb

  • A look at the rise, fall and rise again of Pauline Hanson and One Nation, as well as the symbiotic relationship betweens politicians and the press.

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    Miles Franklin embodies a significant strand of Australian feminism. My Brilliant Career -- or My Brilliant (?) Career as she wanted it known -- is a national icon. The importance of Franklin's diaries cannot be overstated, and Paul Brunton's selection is beautifully edited, annotated, and illustrated. Many of the people referred to in Franklin's diaries have been painstakingly identified, a crucial task. The first question readers might ask is why the selection is only from 1932 to 1954, from when Franklin returned to Australia, permanently, at the age of fifty-three. Is the title of the book misleading? Jill Roe, the Franklin scholar, tells us these twenty-two years of diaries are ... read more.
     



 
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Allen and Unwin

  • Allen & Unwin commenced publishing in Australia in 1976 as part of the UK-based parent company of the same name. In 1990, following the purchase of the UK parent company by HarperCollins, Allen & Unwin's Australian directors effected a management buy-out and the company became fully independent, owning the Allen & Unwin imprint throughout the world. This year we will publish 220 titles, ranging from fiction and general non-fiction through an academic list specialising in the social sciences and health, to the Allen & Unwin children's list.

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