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Overland magazine

Overland, the most radical of Australia’s long-standing literary and cultural magazines, celebrated its 50th year in 2004.

Publishing features, fiction, poetry, reviews, comment, artwork and opinion pieces, Overland is committed to engaging with important literary, cultural and political issues in contemporary Australia. It has a tradition of publishing dissenting articles with a political and cultural focus.

With ‘culture that matters … since 1954’ as its motto, Overland is the only high-profile Australian literary magazine that sees the publication and advancement of new and marginal writers as part of its charter.

Produced quarterly, Overland was founded in 1954 under the editorship of Stephen Murray-Smith, with the motto ‘temper democratic, bias Australian’. At the time it incorporated The Realist Writer, the journal of the Melbourne Realist Writers’ Group.

Contributors over the years include Peter Carey, Patrick White, Garry Disher, Elizabeth Jolley, Stuart Macintyre, David Foster, Germaine Greer, Dorothy Hewett, Bob Ellis, Mark Davis, Sam Watson, David Williamson, Thomas Shapcott, Judith Wright, Rodney Hall, Gwen Harwood, Thea Astley, Alan Marshall, Xavier Herbert, Amanda Lohrey, Eric Beach, Bruce Dawe, Frank Moorhouse, Manning Clark, Humphrey McQueen, Christina Stead, Geoffrey Dutton, Max Harris, Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Nancy Cato, Frank Hardy, Lily Brett, Peter Porter, James McAuley, Geoffrey Serle, Graham Pitts, Desmond O’Grady, Robert Adamson, Ian Turner, Jack Hibberd, Dean Kiley, Christos Tsiolkas, Alex Buzo, Martin Flanagan, Marcia Langton, Fiona Capp, Margaret Simons, Linda Jaivin and many others.

Yet Overland also gives a voice to the experiences that are excluded from the mainstream media and publishing outlets. The magazine has been part of an ongoing attempt to document lesser-known stories and histories, dissect media hysteria and dishonesty, debunk the populist hype of politicians, give a voice to those whose stories are otherwise marginalised, misrepresented or ignored, and point public debate in alternative directions.

OVERLAND PUBLIC LECTURES

The Overland Public Lecture Series commenced in 2001. Writers and public intellectuals with important things to say about Australian culture, literature and society present lectures that engage a broad audience and offer new and often provocative perspectives on cultural and humanitarian issues in Australia. Described by Peter Craven in the Age as “an unambiguously splendid thing”, the Overland Public Lecture Series has been a vehicle through which public debate about Australian culture has broadened. Recent lecturers have included Romana Koval, Antony Loewenstein, John Harms, Brian Walters SC, Joel Deane, Natasha Cica, Veronica Brady, Mary Kalantzis, David Marr, Barry Hill, Martin Flanagan, Phil Cleary, Amanda Lohrey, Bob Ellis, Mark Davis, RW Connell, Humphrey McQueen, Stuart Macintyre, Mischa Merz, Marcia Langton and Linda Jaivin.

OVERLAND JUDITH WRIGHT POETRY PRIZE FOR NEW AND EMERGING POETS

Malcolm Robertson Foundation logoWith the support of the Malcolm Robertson Foundation, this exciting annual prize, for new and emerging poets, commenced in 2007.


Overland is available in bookstores or by subscription

EDITOR:
Jeff Sparrow

ASSOCIATE EDITOR:
Rjurik Davidson

ONLINE EDITOR:
Jacinda Woodhead

COPY EDITOR:
John Marnell

FICTION EDITOR:
Kalinda Ashton

POETRY EDITOR:
Keri Glastonbury

PATRON: Barry Jones AO

Submissions are welcome but only in hard copy (see submission guidelines) to the postal address:

OVERLAND
VU-Footscray Park Campus
PO Box 14428
MELBOURNE VIC 8001
AUSTRALIA
tel +61 3 9919 4163
fax +61 3 9687 7614
email overland@vu.edu.au

Overland is published by:

O L Society Limited
9 David Street
FOOTSCRAY VIC 3011
incorporated in Victoria
ABN 78 007 402 673

For details of advertising with Overland, click here.

Overland is distributed to the book trade by:

The Scribo Group
Equinox Centre

18 Rodborough Road
Frenchs Forest NSW 2086

orders@scribo.com.au

1300 SCRIBO


spunclogofaOverland is a member of SPUNC: the Small Press Underground Networking Community.


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