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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.
Notes
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An earlier version of this article appears Southerly 56.4 (Summer 1996-1997) under the title 'Joseph Furphy and the Lady Novelists'. pp. 153-163.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 11 Mar 2015 14:04:40
33-40, notes 151-152
Joseph Furphy and the Authoresses
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