Progressive comic verse on topics of current political or general interest, including the coronation of Charles III and the case for an Australian republic; the waste and folly of the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal; the rights of Palestinians; the justification for radical action in the face of climate change, and the urgent need to reverse the self-harming Brexit of Britain from the EU.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Verse Introduction
Three
Kings: marking the coronation of Charles III
Net Zero or
Bust
Progressive
comic haiku
Rime of the
AUKUS Submariner
Budget Day
Al-Nakba
Day
Assange
Unbound
Greta and
the garbos
Gadarene
Swine
Seeking
Asylum
Huskisson
The Other
Side (about struggle for justice in Myanmar)
Snapshots
of Brexit
Britain in
2023
Getting to
Yes in Wales
Lab or a
Tory?
Ode: Intimations of Inveracity from Recollections of Labour Childhood
Sobre o autor
Jake Lynch is an Associate Professor in the University of Sydney Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, where he teaches into the Masters of Social Justice.His poetry has appeared in Trad and Now, New Bush Telegraph and West England Bylines.Jake’s debut novel, Blood on the Stone, an historical mystery thriller set in Oxford of the 17th Century, was originally published in e-book and paperback by Unbound Books. His own recording of the audio book was published in 2023. The Oxford Mail called it: ‘An absorbing and ultimately compelling read … a gripping narrative, based on well-rounded characters, in a convincingly recreated milieu of time and place.’In scholarly work, Jake is the most published and most cited author on Peace Journalism, with six books and over sixty articles and book chapters to his credit. For his contributions to both theory and practice, he was awarded the 2017 Luxembourg Peace Prize, by the Schengen Peace Foundation.Before taking up an academic post, in 2007, Jake enjoyed a near-20-year career in journalism, with spells as a Political Correspondent for Sky News and Australia Correspondent for The Independent, culminating in a role as on-air presenter at BBC World TV News, where he presented over a thousand live half- hour news programmes. He won five international awards for his documentary film, Soldiers of Peace, narrated by Michael Douglas.