Published in Overland Issue 223 Winter 2016 · Uncategorized Editorial Jacinda Woodhead What is hope and why do humans need it? In this issue, in her inimitable style, Alison Croggon ruminates on this idea. Is hope ‘a desperate mirage to combat despair, an expression of our inability to comprehend the reality of our own mortality’, or ‘perhaps, this light, falling now, on that tree?’ What does South Africa look like after the end of apartheid – a struggle that twenty-two years ago conducted the world into a crescendo of united hope? Sisonke Msimang offers us a glimpse: her essay examines the Fallists – the student movement that shut down every university across the country last year in an unprecedented act of resistance, one which shows how education, and barriers to it, remains one of the most fundamental markers of inequality. While South Africa’s disparity is obviously great, closer to home, we too witness a growing divide, seen in the erosion of our research and arts sectors, as documented by Sarah Burnside and Stuart Glover, just as Olivier Jutel’s brilliant portrait of New Zealand’s John Key shows how the neoliberal state is successfully sold. There are two moving outsider accounts: Dean Biron on his years as a detective in Brisbane, and Jay Carmichael on his experiences of contemporary homophobia. This issue also contains poetic beauty, such as Susie Orpen’s ‘Still Dreaming’, daring, as in Leif Mahoney’s ‘Night pieces’ (constructed from lines of Ern Malley), and poems that disrupt the mirage – Anna Ryan-Punch’s ‘Pseudonyms for women (after Danez Smith)’, and the winner of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers, Ellen van Neerven’s astounding ‘Expert’. All are reminders that ‘art is a wager,’ as Croggon writes, ‘however contingent, on a present that we create with our own hands, our minds, our bodies’. Read the rest of Overland 223 – If you liked this article, please subscribe or donate. Jacinda Woodhead Jacinda Woodhead is a former editor of Overland and current law student. More by Jacinda Woodhead › 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 18 December 202418 December 2024 · Nakata Brophy Prize Dawning in the rivulet of my father’s mourning Yasmin Smith My father floats words down Toonooba each morning. They arrive to me by noon. / Nothing diminishes in his unfolding, not even the currents in midwinter June. / He narrates the sky prehistorically like a cadence cutting him into deluge. 16 December 202416 December 2024 · Palestine Learning to see in the dark Alison Martin Images can represent a splice of reality from the other side of the world, mirror truths about ourselves and our collective humanity we can hardly bear to face. But we can also use them to recognise the patterns of dehumanisation that have manifested throughout history, and prevent their awful conclusions in the present. To rewrite in real time our most shameful histories before they are re-made on the world stage and in our social media feeds.