Covering writers from Michelle de Kretser to Gerald Murnane, Alexis Wright to Helen Garner, The Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel provides a contemporary view of Australian fiction, including unprecedented coverage of First Nations authors. This book is an excellent reference source on a subject of growing interest to researchers.
Covering writers from Michelle de Kretser to Gerald Murnane, Alexis Wright to Helen Garner, The Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel provides a contemporary view of Australian fiction, including unprecedented coverage of First Nations authors. This book is an excellent reference source on a subject of growing interest to researchers.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Nicholas Birns teaches at New York University. He is author of The Hyperlocal in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Literary Space (2019) and Contemporary Australian Literature: A World Not Yet Dead (2015), among other books. He edited the US-based journal of Australian literature Antipodes from 2001 to 2018. He has published in journal such as Angelaki, Exemplaria, Partial Answers, Victorian Studies, and The Journal of New Zealand Literature, and has reviewed for Modernism/modernity, The New York Times Book Review, and MLQ.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: preoccupations of the Australian novel Louis Klee and Nicholas Birns Part I. Contexts: 1. Presencing: writing in the decolonial space Jeanine Leane 2. Literary visitors and the Australian novel Brendan Casey 3. Settler colonial fictions: beyond nationalism and universalism Paul Giles 4. White writing, indigenous Australia, and the chronotopes of the settler novel Michael Griffiths 5. Mabo, Mob, and the novel Evelyn Araluen 6. Publishing the Australian novel Emmett Stinson Part II. Authorships: 7. 'Rich and Strange': Christina stead and the transnational novel Fiona Morrison 8. Sexuality in Patrick White's fiction Chen Hong 9. Constellational form in Gerald Murnane Louis Klee 10. Helen Garner's house of fiction Brigid Rooney 11. Alexis Wright's novel activism Lynda Ng 12. Kim Scott and the doctoral novel Joseph Steinberg Part III. Futures: 13. The contemporary western Sydney novel Lachlan Brown 14. First nations transnationalism Declan Fry 15. Beyond the cosmopolitan: small dangerous fragments Michelle Cahill 16. Craft and truth: the Australian verse novel Nicholas Birns 17. Queering Mateship: David Malouf and Christos Tsiolkas Lesley Hawkes and Mark Piccini 18. Australian fiction in the anthropocene Tony Hughes D'aeth 19. What is the (Australian) refugee novel? Keyvan Allahyari Further reading compiled by Joseph Steinberg Index.
Introduction: preoccupations of the Australian novel Louis Klee and Nicholas Birns Part I. Contexts: 1. Presencing: writing in the decolonial space Jeanine Leane 2. Literary visitors and the Australian novel Brendan Casey 3. Settler colonial fictions: beyond nationalism and universalism Paul Giles 4. White writing, indigenous Australia, and the chronotopes of the settler novel Michael Griffiths 5. Mabo, Mob, and the novel Evelyn Araluen 6. Publishing the Australian novel Emmett Stinson Part II. Authorships: 7. 'Rich and Strange': Christina stead and the transnational novel Fiona Morrison 8. Sexuality in Patrick White's fiction Chen Hong 9. Constellational form in Gerald Murnane Louis Klee 10. Helen Garner's house of fiction Brigid Rooney 11. Alexis Wright's novel activism Lynda Ng 12. Kim Scott and the doctoral novel Joseph Steinberg Part III. Futures: 13. The contemporary western Sydney novel Lachlan Brown 14. First nations transnationalism Declan Fry 15. Beyond the cosmopolitan: small dangerous fragments Michelle Cahill 16. Craft and truth: the Australian verse novel Nicholas Birns 17. Queering Mateship: David Malouf and Christos Tsiolkas Lesley Hawkes and Mark Piccini 18. Australian fiction in the anthropocene Tony Hughes D'aeth 19. What is the (Australian) refugee novel? Keyvan Allahyari Further reading compiled by Joseph Steinberg Index.
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