AustLit logo

AustLit

y separately published work icon Philament periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... vol. 24 no. 2 December 2018 of Philament est. 2003- Philament
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Landscapes and Mindscapes : The Confluence of Modernism and Ecopoetics in Eleanor Dark’s Return to Coolami, Kathleen Davidson , single work criticism

In her entry on Eleanor Dark in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Marivic Wyndham notes that “psychology fascinated Dark, and the bush was her physical and spiritual solace.” As Wyndham continues, “[Dark] drew compelling landscapes of the mind and of the Australian natural environment.”1 This article will discuss the dissolution of boundaries between the landscape and mindscape in Dark’s work, and it will consider how the natural world infiltrates modernist explorations of interiority in Dark’s third published novel, Return to Coolami (1936).2 In examining the convergence of modernism and ecopoetics in Dark’s prose, this essay brings together two supposedly distinct modes of critical enquiry: environmental humanities scholarship and modernism studies. By exploring the intersection of these two approaches, this reading will challenge the binary conception in which modernist texts lack any authorial, subjective, or narratorial investment in the natural world and, in so doing, bring to light a range of complementarities between ecopoetics and modernism. In Return to Coolami, the natural world inescapably affects human interiority, and Dark’s eco-modern prose precipitates a new awareness of ecological being that complicates anthropocentric worldviews.' (Introduction)

(p. 15-32)
The Red Gloves, Brooklyn Arnot , single work short story (p. 65-70)
Red Snow / 붉은 눈, Megan Buys , single work short story (p. 71-78)
The Sestina of Degenerationi"if my buckled body could talk it would", Kira Legaan , single work poetry (p. 79-80)
Shadowboxingi"I have an ache", Kira Legaan , single work poetry (p. 81)
No Broken Animali"There’s a she wolf", Kira Legaan , single work poetry (p. 82)
Sunrise, Sunseti"A crinkled smile, crossed a crinkled road,", Stewart Manley , single work poetry

Author's note: For Mme Ma Lee August, 2016

(p. 83)
Prophet of Lies, Sydney Nicholas , single work short story (p. 85-94)
Mind of a Madman, Primitive , single work poetry

'A long time ago, there was a beautiful princess. Her name was Cassandra. Suitors far and wide coveted her, and asked her father, King Priam, for her hand in marriage. And yet, she refused them all. Her only wish was to be a priestess of the goddess Athena, to worship her in a beautiful temple deep within the walls of Ilium. Like Athena, she refused all marriage proposals, choosing instead to live forever as a maiden.' 

(p. 95)
Clumps, Isabelle Wentworth , single work short story (p. 103-104)
X