Edition 57
Perils of Populism
The world is in the grip of profound political and social change. Leaders are rising to power who promise to respond to the voice of the people – people who are aggrieved and resentful, feeling the sting of inequality and the uncertainty of a new economic order. As the global economy continues to change, disruption and reaction become inevitable. As trust is further eroded, the desire to lash out is understandable.
Griffith Review 57: Perils of Populism examines the rise of populism across the world. It features several writers who won the Griffith Review Queensland Writers Fellowships, and explores the nuances of populism past and present – building a conscience, confronting sexual abuse, addressing climate-change deniers, navigating an obstructive bureaucracy, coming face-to-face with religious cults and discovering the enduring kindness of strangers.
Contributors include: Rodney Tiffen, Paul Ham, Andrew Stafford, Maggie Tiojakin, Bronwyn Adcock, Dennis Altman, Michael Winkler, Phillip Frazer, Cameron Muir, Tom Bamforth, David Ritter, Justin Gleeson, Nigel Powell, Bri Lee, Lech Blaine, Ben Falkenmire, Sanaz Fotouhi, David Fettling, Lisa Walker, Rowena Lennox, Linda Neil, Jim Hearn, Eliza Vitri Handayani, Heather Taylor Johnson, Joshua Ip, Sarah Day, John Kinsella and Tasos Markou.
Griffith Review 57: Perils of Populism is published with the support of the Australia Council for the Arts.
$18.50 – $27.99