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Flinders Academic Commons >
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ABR - Australian Book Review >
No 254 - September, 2003 >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2328/732
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| Title: | The Meaning of Recognition. [essay] |
| Authors: | James, Clive |
| Keywords: | Clive James Western liberal democracy Madonna Britain French Resistance Elvis Presley Dante liberal intelligentsia Sydney University Goethe Faust Things Happen Tolstoy Natasha Rostova Anna Karenina Ireland Florence Eugenio Montale Pushkin Lensky London New Yorker Les Murray A Working Forest Blood and Bone Egyptian pastoralism Babi Yar Rilke Down the Lake With Half a Chook Vernacular Republic English post-World War II post-World War Two post-World War 2 New Selected Poems Animal Warmth Up On All Fours The Boys Who Stole the Funeral Fredy Neptune Dispossessed Louis MacNeice Autumn Sequel Virgil Chinese landscape Montaigne St Francis of Assisi Menzel Douanier Rousseau agrarian conservatism Prussia American South Argentina Posh Spice David Beckham the Beatles Carla Bruni Mick Jagger Luna Park Plato's Republic Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal La Trobe University / Australian Book Review Annual Lecture |
| Issue Date: | Sep-2003 |
| Publisher: | Australian Book Review |
| Citation: | James, Clive 2003. The Meaning of Recognition. 'Australian Book Review', No 254, September, 21-29. |
| Series/Report no.: | No 254 |
| Abstract: | This essay reflects on the meaning of recognition as opposed to celeberity, as James reads and analyses selections from the poetry of Philip Hodgins (1959-95). |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2328/732 |
| ISSN: | 0155-2864 |
| Appears in Collections: | No 254 - September, 2003
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