Understanding Primary Education as a Whole: Socio-Cultural Perspectives for Leaders
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Tony Birch wordt geprezen om zijn suggestieve verhalen, die zich vaak verdiepen in het rijke weefsel van het leven en de ervaringen van Australische inheemse volkeren. Zijn proza wordt gekenmerkt door een diepe authenticiteit en een groot begrip van menselijke veerkracht, en biedt lezers aangrijpende verkenningen van identiteit, familie en overleven. Birch combineert meesterlijk lyrische taal met rauw realisme, en creëert gedenkwaardige personages en omgevingen die lang na de laatste pagina blijven hangen. Zijn werk vormt een belangrijke bijdrage aan de hedendaagse literatuur, opgemerkt vanwege zijn literaire waarde en culturele resonantie.




A profound allegory of good and evil, this immersive novel set in the 1960s delves into the lengths we go to for love, focusing on a native Australian family threatened by a racist government. Odette Brown has lived on the fringes of Deane, a small Australian town, where dark secrets lurk—secrets that may explain her daughter Lila's abandonment of her one-year-old granddaughter, Sissy, and the mystery of Sissy's white skin in an Aboriginal family. For thirteen years, Odette has raised Sissy in secrecy, avoiding the attention of welfare authorities who remove fair-skinned Aboriginal children. However, the arrival of a new policeman with a harsh demeanor disrupts their fragile existence. Odette must summon all her courage and cunning to protect Sissy from being taken and perhaps even find her daughter. Together, Odette and Sissy embody resilience, confronting threats to their family and identities with grace and ingenuity. The narrative sheds light on Australia’s post-colonial past, particularly the government's policy of separating Indigenous children from their families, known as the Stolen Generations. Through a tight-knit group of inspiring characters, the story highlights our shared humanity and the limitless power of kindness, hope, and love.
A timely examination of progressive politics in the era of radical populism. Since 2016, western democracies have experienced a series of political earthquakes, spectacularly upending conventional political wisdom. Everywhere, outsider politicians rail against 'the elite'. Yet, with a few notable exceptions, the populist mood has benefited reactionaries rather than reformers. The status quo might be in crisis, but the emerging voices are those of hate and violence. Where is the progressive alternative? In Trigger Warnings, Jeff Sparrow sympathetically but critically examines key progressive ideas. How does a billionaire position himself as anti-elitist? Are the culture wars worth fighting? What's at stake in the battles over political correctness? Should progressives defend it -- and, if so, how? Sparrow traces the evolution of the Left and Right to explain the origins of this strange evolution, untangling some of the thorniest controversies of our time and arguing that the future needn't only belong to nihilists and bigots.
Shadow Boxing is a collection of ten linked stories in the life of a boy growing up in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy in the 1960s. A beautifully rendered time capsule, it captures a period of decay,turmoil and change through innocent unblinking eyes.