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AbstractHistoryArchive Description
Explores 'moments of departure and arrival' as recreated in literary texts by writers who recently came to Australia from China. Gives a descriptive overview of a number of relevant texts.
Affiliation Notes
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Associated with the AustLit subset Australian Literary Responses to 'Asia' as the work discusses Chinese-Australian writing.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Transnational (Il)literacies : Reading the "New Chinese Literature in Australia" in China
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 25 no. 1 2011; (p. 83-89) 'Ommundsen talks about the transnational in Australian literary studies which was the lively critical debate at the time when her colleagues Alison Broinowski, Paul Sharrad and she in 2008 embarked on the ARC-supported project "Globalizing Australian literature: Asian Australian writing, Asian perspectives on Australian literature." As organizers of the 2008 conference of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature conference, the Wollongong team decided to focus on this articulation between the transnational/global and the national in Australian literary studies, hoping that the papers would shed further light on these debates, at the same time enriching the theoretical arguments underpinning their own project.' (Publisher's abstract)
-
Transnational (Il)literacies : Reading the "New Chinese Literature in Australia" in China
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 25 no. 1 2011; (p. 83-89) 'Ommundsen talks about the transnational in Australian literary studies which was the lively critical debate at the time when her colleagues Alison Broinowski, Paul Sharrad and she in 2008 embarked on the ARC-supported project "Globalizing Australian literature: Asian Australian writing, Asian perspectives on Australian literature." As organizers of the 2008 conference of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature conference, the Wollongong team decided to focus on this articulation between the transnational/global and the national in Australian literary studies, hoping that the papers would shed further light on these debates, at the same time enriching the theoretical arguments underpinning their own project.' (Publisher's abstract)
Last amended 15 Oct 2002 16:21:35
61-69; notes 286-287
From 'Hello Freedom' to 'Fuck You Australia' : Recent Chinese-Australian Writing
Subjects:
- East Wind, West Wind 1992 single work autobiography
- Swallowing Clouds 1997 single work novel
- Wo de caifu zai Aozhou 1991 single work novella
- Introduction 1995 single work criticism
- On the Goddess Rock 1998 single work novel
- The Eastern Slope Chronicle 2002 single work novel
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