AustLit publishes biographical entries and brief essays on Australian writers, critics and storytellers, organisational histories relating to publishers, theatre companies and other arts organisations,
arts and other cultural festivals, national and international awards, as well as works of fiction and criticism. It also includes thousands of full-text works, including
The BlackWords Essays, by Professor
Anita Heiss, interviews with
Indigenous Australian authors, and teaching and educational content. AustLit has undertaken
digitisation programs to create
full-text versions of
out-of-print and
out-of-copyright literary works and critical articles about Australian literature, providing full-text access to samples of works published from 1795. It also provides access to full-text material hosted by other platforms, including
Trove, libraries, public digitisation projects, and
electronically published works. AustLit publishes new scholarly texts and datasets in digital format, such as
AustLit: Literature of Tasmania,
Beyond Goggles and Corsets: Australian Steampunk and
Settler Colonial Literature. The
South Australian Women Writers dataset contains thousands of records migrated from the
Bibliography of South Australian Women Writers, compiled by Anne Chittleborough, Rick Hosking and Graham Tulloch of Flinders University and published electronically in 1999 by the
State Library of South Australia. Added to AustLit in 2000, it continues to grow and Flinders University is primarily responsible for its development. The original dataset was completed in 2003.
Changes in coverage over time Over time, some inclusion criteria have widened: Researchers use AustLit to develop datasets for specific fields of study. These projects include histories of books, magazines, and publishing; regionally-based surveys of publishing activity; and thematically-based subsets. Research into Australian popular and
pulp fiction is supported, alongside research into theatre history, drama and multicultural writers. ==Usage==