The 1930s Jindyworobak Movement promoted these poems as part of an effort to find a uniquely Australian literature. For 10 points each:
[10e] Name these poems distinguished by their regular rhymes and use of Australian dialect and folklore. Prominent writers of them include Breaker Morant and Banjo Patterson.
ANSWER: bush ballads [or bush songs or bush poems; prompt on partial answers]
[10h] Although the Jindyworobaks drew on indigenous culture, no Aboriginal Australian published a book ofverse until this later poet. This poet of “Municipal Gum” listed flora and fauna that are gone in “We Are Going.”
ANSWER: Oodgeroo Noonuccal (“OO-juh-roo noo-NUCK-ul”) [or Oodgeroo Noonuccal; accept Kath Walker or Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska]
[10m] The Jindyworobaks often clashed with this modernist journal, founded by Max Harris to promote avant-garde literature. This magazine was duped into publishing intentionally nonsensical poems by the fictional Ern Malley.
ANSWER: Angry Penguins
<Ani Perumalla, World Literature>