Inside the dark tower

The successful continuation of the world

Featured in

  • Published 20250805
  • ISBN: 978-1-923213-10-4
  • Extent: 236pp
  • Paperback, eBook, PDF

They are turning our atmosphere into their atmosphere.
They Live

IT IS JUST after five o’clock in the afternoon and I’m standing in the midst of Mia Yellagonga, the complex of buildings that constitutes the headquarters of Woodside Energy. A steady traffic of people is departing for the day. On the adjacent street, a patter of pedestrians passes, preoccupied with their own affairs. Mia Yellagonga is constructed across a number of levels at the upper end of St Georges Terrace, the main artery that transects the heart of Perth’s central business district. The tallest of the structures by far is Woodside Karlak, which looms twenty-nine floors into the sky and from its western aspect stares downward onto the state’s parliament. 

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

More from author

The inspirations of radical nostalgia

There is nothing natural or inevitable about the ‘decline’ of history and the broader arts and humanities, any more than there is the destruction of nature. Neither are passive or natural processes; both occur as a consequence of deliberate decision-making made in accordance with ideological preferences, usually supporting the material objectives of the vested interests that systematically corrupt our democracy and society.
Redeeming universities and other public institutions requires sustained political effort. The decline of academic history can be reversed through ending the ideological sway of neoliberal managerialism in universities, the allocation of reasonable levels of resourcing, and the provision of job security and professional autonomy to sufficient numbers of historians, plus time and space to learn for their students. Loss of historical consciousness, unlike extinction, need not be forever. With air returned to their lungs once more, the disciplines preoccupied with human purpose and meaning, fostering habits of critical thinking, are amenable to full resuscitation.

More from this edition

Maiden, mother, monster

Non-fiction I FIRST SAW her when I was twenty-one. She was wearing a knitted purple cardigan over a cream collared shirt buttoned to her long throat....

A nation’s right to remember

Non-fiction Empirical History had silenced Indigenous archives and muted Indigenous historians in the name of ‘objectivity’.– Anna Clark, Making Australian History LATE IN 2024, I crossed the...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.