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Issue Details: First known date: 2000... 2000 Real Relations : The Feminist Politics of Form in Australian Fiction
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Contents

* Contents derived from the Rushcutters Bay, Sydney Eastern Harbourside, Sydney Eastern Suburbs, Sydney, New South Wales,:Association for the Study of Australian Literature Halstead Press , 2000 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Introduction : Real Relations : the Feminist Politics of Form in Australian Fiction, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 7-17, notes 148-149)
Ada Cambridge and the Woman Question, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 18-32, notes 150-151)
Joseph Furphy and the Authoresses, Susan Lever , single work criticism
Lever examines Joseph Furphy's attitude towards the plots and narrative techniques of nineteenth century lady novelists in Such is Life, and finds that the subversive nature of the narrative creates a text more feminist than critics have acknowledged. Employing Ada Cambridge's novels for comparison, Lever demonstrates that this feminism is produced by Furphy's destablizing use of romantic and realist modes. Lever concludes that, while Cambridge appears quite conservative in this comparison, her narratives tested the restrictive form of the newspaper serial and, therefore, must be reconsidered in this context because Furphy wrote with no such restrictions.
(p. 33-40, notes 151-152)
A Kind of Romance : Henry Handel Richardson's Maurice Guest, Susan Lever , single work criticism
Lever argues that Maurice Guest provides a "shrewd analysis of the cultural myths surrounding sexual behaviour, and that [Richardson's] dissection of romance reveals the relationship between such myths and power". In Maurice Guest women do not play the role of the submissive femme fatale. Richardson's adoption of a naturalist narrative reveals the complications of such constructions. Lever stresses that in Maurice Guest women are not "mere ciphers of masculine art" but are active participants in the world of the imagination.
(p. 41-54, notes 152-153)
Realism and Socialism : Katharine Susannah Prichard's Coonardoo, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 55-68, notes 154-155)
Homo Australiensis : Vance Palmer, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 69-77, notes 155)
Christina Stead's Night of Struggle, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 78-94, notes 156-157)
The Human Hierarchy of Men and Women : Patrick White's "The Twyborn Affair", Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 95-104, notes 157)
Life and Art : Helen Garner and Sally Morgan, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 105-119, notes 157-159)
A Masculine Crisis : David Foster's Mates of Mars, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 120-130, notes 159-160)
Feminist Experiment and Contemporary Women's Writing, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 131-147, notes 160)
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