Published 15 November 201015 November 2010 · Main Posts Overland magazine wants you! Editorial team As a subscriber, that is. Our annual fundraising drive – Subscriberthon – is running 9am Monday 22 to 5pm Monday 29 November. During that week, our website will be transformed into a Subscriberthon carnival of guest posts from celebrated writers and bloggers, competitions and a general air of festivity and collectivity. Subscribe during that week for a year’s worth of Australia’s finest literary journal, prizes galore and the chance to be part of the Overland community, online and in print. Benefits include but are not limited to: radical culture, progressive politics, fine writing and impassioned debate. You can also help out with Subscriberthon by linking to overland.org.au from your own blog and/or site. Overland Subscriberthon 2010 22-29 November – still fighting the powers that be! Editorial team More by Editorial team Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays First published in Overland Issue 228 25 May 202326 May 2023 · Main Posts The ‘Chinese question’ and colonial capitalism in New Gold Mountain Christy Tan SBS’s New Gold Mountain sets out to recover the history of the Gold Rush from the marginalised perspective of Chinese settlers but instead reinforces the erasure of Indigenous sovereignty. Although celebrated for its multilingual script and diverse representation, the mini-TV series ignores how the settlement of Chinese migrants and their recruitment into colonial capitalism consolidates the ongoing displacement of First Nations peoples. First published in Overland Issue 228 15 February 202322 February 2023 · Main Posts Self-translation and bilingual writing as a transnational writer in the age of machine translation Ouyang Yu To cut a long story short, it all boils down to the need to go as far away from oneself as possible before one realizes another need to come back to reclaim what has been lost in the process while tying the knot of the opposite ends and merging them into a new transformation.