Published in Overland Issue 207 Winter 2012 · Uncategorized Published by Global Supermarket Pty Ltd Sebastian Gurciullo choose from chicken or beef these delicious soups are jam-packed with chunky pieces of vegetables and meat offered in a convenient ring-pull can microwave and serve in just 2 1/2 minutes free from artificial flavours and preservatives these soups are sure to hit the spot from our premium range these delicious soups are a good source of fibre and preservative-free just heat and serve the perfect winter warmer serve with parsley, sour cream or chilli for that extra bite an all-time favourite try adding corn and serving with fresh, crusty bread from our premium range of delicious soups are also 99% fat-free just heat and serve Disclaimer: Readers should make their own inquiries in making any decisions Sebastian Gurciullo Sebastian Gurciullo has co-edited and contributed to the Textbase journal since 1998. He has published a collection of concrete poetry under the title Marginal Text (Textbase publications 2004). He works as an editor and curator at Public Record Office Victoria. More by Sebastian Gurciullo › 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 21 February 202521 February 2025 · The university Closing the noose: a dispatch from the front line of decasualisation Matthew Taft Across the board, universities have responded to legislation aimed at rectifying this already grim situation by halting casual hiring, cutting courses, expanding class sizes, and increasing the workloads of permanent staff. This is an unintended consequence of the legislation, yes, but given the nefarious history of the university, from systemic wage theft to bad-faith bargaining, hardly a surprising one. 19 February 2025 · Disability The devaluing of disability support Áine Kelly-Costello and Jonathan Craig Over the past couple of decades, disabled people in much of the Western world have often sought, or agreed to, more individualised funding schemes in order to gain greater “choice and control” over the support we receive. But the autonomy, dignity and flexibility we were promised seems constantly under threat or out of reach, largely because of the perception that allowing us such “luxuries” is too expensive.