AustLit
Is part of
Melbourne University Literary and Cultural Studies Series
1993
series - publisher
Issue Details:
First known date:
1996...
1996
The Space of Poetry : Australian Essays on Contemporary Poetics
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Contents
* Contents derived from the
Parkville,
Parkville - Carlton area,
Melbourne - North,
Melbourne,
Victoria,:University of Melbourne. Dept. of English
, 1996 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
- Poetry and the Common Tongue, single work criticism (p. 69-80)
- Borders in Space: Performing Crossings, single work criticism biography (p. 81-100)
- The Spoken and the Written Poem: Portrait of the Woman as a Young Poet, single work criticism biography (p. 101-110)
- Untimely Meditations (from Lecture: Untimely Meditations (Tentative Title)), extract (p. 111-132)
- Towards a Scriptural Realism, single work criticism (p. 133-142)
- Poetry as Possession and Dispossession, single work criticism (p. 143-153)
- Poet as Hero? The Romantic Aesthetics of Gwen Harwood, single work criticism biography (p. 155-169)
- J.S. Harry's Imaginary Pelicans : Translations on the Poetic Canvas, single work criticism (p. 171-181)
- Les Murray: The National Aesthetic and the Space of Poetry, single work criticism biography (p. 183-194)
- Ut Cinema Poesis: Cinematism and John Tranter's `The Floor of Heaven', single work criticism (p. 195-216)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
-
Kristevan Intertextuality and John Scott's Warra Warra : Examining the Mosaic, Uncovering the Political and Revealing a New Plurality
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 71 no. 3 2011; (p. 174-187) In 1966, early in her research career, Julia Kristeva began working on a commentary of the Russian formalist, Mikhail Bakhtin. Bakhtin's ideas of "dialogism" and "carnival" struck a powerful note: "At the beginning of my research, when I was writing a commentary on Bakhtin, I had the feeling ... we had reached an important point in moving beyond structuralism". Her commentary first introduced the term "intertextuality" into literary theory. It is difficult to under - estimate the impact of Kristeva's ideas, coming at a time when theorists and practitioners were moving away from the rigid forms and ideas imposed by structuralism. Kristeva's presentation, and subsequent publication of a revised version in 1969 as Word, Dialogue and Novel, saw the beginning of the widespread adoption and absorption of the ideas of intertextuality, setting the stage for the movement toward the earliest forms of post-structuralism.' (Author's abstract)
-
The Last Sacred Site?
1996
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 184 1996; (p. 47-48)
— Review of The Space of Poetry : Australian Essays on Contemporary Poetics 1996 anthology criticism biography
-
The Last Sacred Site?
1996
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 184 1996; (p. 47-48)
— Review of The Space of Poetry : Australian Essays on Contemporary Poetics 1996 anthology criticism biography -
Kristevan Intertextuality and John Scott's Warra Warra : Examining the Mosaic, Uncovering the Political and Revealing a New Plurality
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 71 no. 3 2011; (p. 174-187) In 1966, early in her research career, Julia Kristeva began working on a commentary of the Russian formalist, Mikhail Bakhtin. Bakhtin's ideas of "dialogism" and "carnival" struck a powerful note: "At the beginning of my research, when I was writing a commentary on Bakhtin, I had the feeling ... we had reached an important point in moving beyond structuralism". Her commentary first introduced the term "intertextuality" into literary theory. It is difficult to under - estimate the impact of Kristeva's ideas, coming at a time when theorists and practitioners were moving away from the rigid forms and ideas imposed by structuralism. Kristeva's presentation, and subsequent publication of a revised version in 1969 as Word, Dialogue and Novel, saw the beginning of the widespread adoption and absorption of the ideas of intertextuality, setting the stage for the movement toward the earliest forms of post-structuralism.' (Author's abstract)
Last amended 2 Jan 2004 15:42:29
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