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Laura Joseph Laura Joseph i(A116402 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Christos Tsiolkas, Barracuda Laura Joseph , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 74 no. 2 2014; (p. 244-256)

— Review of Barracuda Christos Tsiolkas , 2013 single work novel
1 Laura Joseph on Amy T Matthews, End of the Night Girl Laura Joseph , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: Long Paddock , vol. 72 no. 1 2012;

— Review of End of the Night Girl Amy T. Matthews , 2007 single work novel
1 [Review] Dark Bright Doors [et al] Laura Joseph , 2011 single work review
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 71 no. 1 2011; (p. 336-243)

— Review of Dark Bright Doors Jill Jones , 2010 selected work poetry ; Authentic Local Pamela Brown , 2010 selected work poetry ; Love Poems Dorothy Porter , 2010 selected work poetry
1 Laura Joseph Reviews Fiona Capp My Blood’s Country Laura Joseph , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Long Paddock , vol. 70 no. 2 2010;

— Review of My Blood's Country Fiona Capp , 2010 single work prose
1 [Review] Indelible Ink Laura Joseph , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Long Paddock , vol. 70 no. 2 2010;

— Review of Indelible Ink Fiona McGregor , 2010 single work novel
1 Opening the Gates of Hell : Regional Emergences in Carpentaria and Dreamhunter Laura Joseph , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 69 no. 2 2009; (p. 66-80)
'This essay presents a comparative analysis of two contemporary writers from Australia and New Zealand to argue for their shared secession from the category of nation. The texts in question, Australian writer Alexis Wright's Carpentaria (2006) and New Zealand writer Elizabeth Knox'es cotemporaneous duet Dreamhunter (2005) and Dreamquake (2007), rehearse this secession by replacing the now evacuated space of nation with the space of region. This essay will demonstrate how this regional space constitutes an emergence from colonial topographies of inhabitation.' (66)
1 Dreaming Phantoms and Golems : Elements of The Place Beyond Nation in Carpentaria and Dreamhunter Laura Joseph , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , Special Issue 2009;

'I argue in this essay that Australian writer Alexis Wright's 2006 novel Carpentaria and New Zealand writer Elizabeth Knox's Dreamhunter series (comprising of the novels Dreamhunter (2005) and Dreamquake (2007)) call up the matter of region and the waste of modernity to secede the form of nation. As fictional spaces overlaying real places, doubling with a world of dreams and an underworld of nightmares of colonial violence, these novels also move beyond the form of realism. This essay contends that in dispersing the forms of nation and genre though the matter of particular places, these contemporary antipodean novels deploy a politics of fantasy to reimagine the futures of nation. In this move away from nation towards the material specificities of region, these contemporary antipodean novels enable a transnational reading from the vantage point of region to region.' (Source: essay).

1 Gardening in Hell: Abject Presence and Sublime Present in Dead Europe and The Vintner's Luck Laura Joseph , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , Special Issue 2008; (p. 105-113)

'In two recent Australian and New Zealand novels, Christos Tsiolkas' Dead Europe (2005) and Elizabeth Knox's The Vintner's Luck (1999) respectively, Europe is cast as hell according to the matter of abjection and the temporality of the sublime. As Kristeva theorises this relationship, "the abject is edged with the sublime. It is not the same moment on the journey, but the same subject and speech bring them into being." (1982:11) This essay investigates these two moments arguing that the irruption of the abject or shock of the sublime also enacts a temporal disturbance. In Dead Europe and The Vintner's Luck, the immanence of the abject and sublime is figured according to an insistence on embodiment, propelled by homoerotic and perverse desires and haunted by an irreducible otherness. This essay takes up the theme of ASAL 2007 "the colonial present" in its consideration of temporality and substance - the present, and presence - in these two novels that flesh out queer spaces within individual and national identity.

'These two texts, individually, but perhaps more potently in their conversation, figure queerness as the becoming and undoing of the subject, the locus of a necessary impossibility and a queer opposition to the logic of opposition.

'This essay analyses The Vintner's Luck, and Dead Europe in order to show, via the rhetorical operations of queerness, how the dark matter of literature, by seeping into impossible spaces, opens up new possibilities.' (Author's abstract)

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