Quarterly Essay


Quarterly Essay is an Australian periodical that straddles the border between magazines and non-fiction books. Printed in a book-like page size and using a single-column format, each issue features a single extended essay of at least 20,000 words, with an introduction by the editor, and correspondence relating to essays in previous issues. It was founded in 2001.
Concentrating primarily on Australian politics in a broad sense, the magazine's issues have covered topics including profiles of Mark Latham, to the U.S. military's failure to grasp the importance of tribal affiliation in Iraq, and the "cult" of the CEO.
Its small circulation of a few thousand copies belies the impact it has had, with many ideas in a number of essays impacting the wider public debates on those issues through their repetition in more widely circulated media.
Founding editor Peter Craven was sacked by the magazine's owner, property developer Morry Schwartz, in early 2004 over a dispute about the joint authorship of one essay, and, more widely, the magazine's future direction. Schwartz stated that while he had a vision of the magazine as more "political and Australian" whereas Craven was perhaps "more broad and internationalist".

List of ''Quarterly'' Essay editions

1. Robert Manne – "In Denial – The Stolen Generations and the Right"
2. John Birmingham – "Appeasing Jakarta: Australia's complicity in the East Timor tragedy"
3. Guy Rundle – "The Opportunist: John Howard and the Triumph of Reaction"
4. Don Watson – "Rabbit syndrome: Australia and America"
5. Mungo MacCallum – "Girt by Sea: Australia, the Refugees and the Politics of Fear"
6. John Button – "Beyond belief: what future for Labor?"
7. John Martinkus – "Paradise Betrayed – West Papua's Struggle for Independence"
8. Amanda Lohrey – "Groundswell – The Rise of the Greens"
9. Tim Flannery – "Beautiful Lies – Population & Environment in Australia"
10. Gideon Haigh – "Bad Company – The cult of the CEO"
11. Germaine Greer – "Whitefella Jump Up – The Shortest Way to Nationhood"
12. David Malouf – "Made in England – Australia's British Inheritance"
13. Robert Manne with David Corlett – "Sending Them Home – Refugees and the New Politics of Indifference."
14. Paul McGeough – "Mission Impossible – The Sheikhs, the US and the future of Iraq"
15. Margaret Simons – "Latham's World – The New Politics of the Outsiders"
16. Raimond Gaita – "Breach of Trust – Truth, Morality and Politics"
17. John Hirst – "Kangaroo Court – Family Law in Australia"
18. Gail Bell – "The Worried WellThe Depression Epidemic and the Medicalisation of Our Sorrows"
19. Judith Brett – "Relaxed and Comfortable – The Liberal Party's Australia"
20. John Birmingham – "A Time for War: Australia as a Military Power"
21. Clive Hamilton – "What's Left? The Death of Social Democracy"
22. Amanda Lohrey – "Voting for Jesus – Christianity and Politics in Australia"
23. Inga Clendinnen – "The History Question – Who Owns The Past?"
24. Robyn Davidson – "No Fixed Address – Nomads and the Fate of the Planet"
25. Peter Hartcher – "How To Win The 2007 Election"
26. David Marr – "His Master's Voice – The Corruption of Public Debate under Howard "
27. Ian Lowe – "Reaction Time – Climate Change and the Nuclear Option"
28. Judith Brett – "Exit Right – The Unravelling of John Howard"
29. Anne Manne – "Love and Money: The Family and the Free Market"
30. Paul Toohey – ""
31. Tim Flannery – "Now or Never – A Sustainable Future for Australia?"
32. Kate Jennings – "American Revolution: The Fall of Wall Street and the Rise of Barack Obama".
33. Guy Pearse – ""
34. Annabel Crabb – "".
35. Noel Pearson – "Radical Hope: Education and Equality in Australia"
36. Mungo MacCallum – "Australian Story: Kevin Rudd and the Lucky Country"
37. Waleed Aly – ""
38. David Marr – , June 2010
39. Hugh White – ""
40. George Megalogenis – ""
41. David Malouf – ""
42. Judith Brett – ""
43. Robert Manne – ""
44. Andrew Charlton – ""
45. Anna Krien – "Us & Them: On the Importance of Animals"
46. Laura Tingle – "Great Expectations: Government, Entitlement and an Angry Nation"
47. David Marr – "Political Animal: The Making of Tony Abbott"
48. Tim Flannery – "After the Future: Australia's New Extinction Crisis"
49. Mark Latham – "Not Dead Yet: Labor's Post-Left Future"
50. Anna Goldsworthy – "Unfinished Business: Sex, Freedom and Misogyny"
51. David Marr – "The Prince: Faith, Abuse and George Pell"
52. Linda Jaivin – "Found in Translation, In Praise of a Plural World"
53. Paul Toohey – "That Sinking Feeling: Asylum Seekers and the Search for the Indonesian Solution"
54. Andrew Charlton – "Dragon's Tail: The Lucky Country After the China Boom"
55. Noel Pearson – "A Rightful Place: Race, Recognition and a More Complete Commonwealth"
56. Guy Rundle – "Clivosaurus: The Politics of Clive Palmer"
57. Karen Hitchcock – "Dear Life: On caring for the elderly"
58. David Kilcullen – "Blood Year: Terror and the Islamic State"
59. David Marr – "Faction Man: Bill Shorten's path to power"
60. Laura Tingle – "Political Amnesia: How We Forgot to Govern" D
61. George Megalogenis – "Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal"
62. James Brown – "Firing Line: Australia's Path to War"
63. Don Watson – "Enemy Within: American Politics in the Time of Trump"
64. Stan Grant – "The Australian Dream: Blood, History and Becoming"
65. David Marr – "The White Queen: One Nation and the Politics of Race"
66. Anna Krien – "The Long Goodbye: Coal, Coral and Australia's Climate Deadlock"
67. Benjamin Law – "Moral Panic 101: Equality, Acceptance and the Safe Schools Scandal"
68. Hugh White – "Without America: Australia in the New Asia"
69. Mark McKenna – "Moment of Truth: History and Australia's Future"
70. Richard Denniss – "Dead Right: How Neoliberalism Ate Itself and What Comes Next"
71. Laura Tingle – "Follow the Leader: Democracy and the Rise of the Strongman"
72. Sebastian Smee – "Net Loss: The Inner Life in the Digital Age"
73. Rebecca Huntley – "Australia Fair: Listening to the Nation"
74. Erik Jensen – "The Prosperity Gospel: How Scott Morrison Won and Bill Shorten Lost"
75. Annabel Crabb – "Men at Work: Australia's Parenthood Trap"
76. Peter Hartcher – "Red Flag: Waking Up to China's Challenge"