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Notes
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Contents indexed selectively.
Contents
* Contents derived from the
Delhi,
c
India,c
South Asia,
South and East Asia,
Asia,:Worldview Publications
, 2010 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.- Australian Stories of India 1850–1950, single work criticism (p. 3-18)
- Australians, Orientals and Indians, single work criticism (p. 19-35)
- Oh! Incredible India: Australian Matilda’s Exotic Indian Safari in a Hindustan Contessa with her Australian-Indian/Bengali Husband Milan, single work criticism (p. 52-65)
- Looking Australia in the Face : Political and Contemporary Literary Practice, single work criticism (p. 69-82)
- 'Dancing the Old Enlightenment' : Lightening the Burden of the Enlightenment in Gould’s Book of Fish’, single work criticism (p. 83-101)
- Re-Capturing the Self : A Study of David Malouf’s An Imaginary Life, single work criticism (p. 102-111)
- Interweaving History and Fiction in Peter Carey’s True History of the Kelly Gang, single work criticism (p. 112-120)
- Tradition and Experiment in the Poetry of Judith Wright, single work criticism (p. 121-134)
- Shifting Terrains : The Changing Landscapes and the Narrative Design in Patrick White’s A Fringe of Leaves, single work criticism (p. 135-143)
- Critiquing Space and the Unspoken Word : A Study of Peter Goldsworthy’s Wish, single work criticism (p. 144-150)
- Moving Down the Line : David Unaipon’s 'Walkabout among the White Race', single work criticism (p. 153-167)
- Insatiable Appetites : Vampires, Crocodiles and Colonisers in Beth Yahp’s The Crocodile Fury and Mudrooroo’s Master of the Ghost Dreaming Series, single work criticism (p. 168-183)
- 'Black Poetics' and White Nation : An Overview of Australian Aboriginal Poetry in English, single work criticism (p. 184-201)
- 'White But Not Quite' : Mimicry as Strategy in Doris Pilkington’s Under the Wintamarra Tree, single work criticism (p. 202-209)
- Resisting White Nation : Narrating the Counter-Discursive Allegory of Noongar Identity in Kim Scott’s Benang, single work criticism (p. 210-229)
- Jack Davis’s No Sugar : From Assimilation to Reconciliation, single work criticism (p. 230-239)
- Politics of Incarceration : Re-Reading Mudrooroo’s Wild Cat Screaming, single work criticism (p. 240-249)
- Revising the Metaphor : The Need for Aural Auteur Analysis and the Australian Auteur Film-Maker Rolf De Heer, single work criticism (p. 253-269)
- Screening the 'Nation' : Margin, Cultural Indigeneity and Australian Cinema, single work criticism (p. 270-277)
- The Unseen Hand : Intervention in Textual Production, single work criticism (p. 281-298)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Les Murray in a Dhoti : Transnationalizing Australian Literature
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 25 no. 1 2011; (p. 39-36) 'India has faced a similar challenge in establishing the serious study of its own writing in English, one made more problematic by the battle not only to overcome ingrained colonial prejudice against that writing as second-hand imitations of British literature, but because of the resistance from nationalist critics championing writing in the autochthonous languages of the subcontinent. The tactical solution amongst academics in Australia has been in part to accept the consolidation of the field in the national context and to look beyond the national to historical complex networks of literary production and circulation under Empire and to current networks of diasporic movements in and out of Australia. Among other things Sharrad shares that the current calibration of research publications in Australia and the allocation of research grants threaten steadily to concentrate resources around a few key international journals and narrow interpretations of the national interest.' (Editor's abstract)
-
Les Murray in a Dhoti : Transnationalizing Australian Literature
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 25 no. 1 2011; (p. 39-36) 'India has faced a similar challenge in establishing the serious study of its own writing in English, one made more problematic by the battle not only to overcome ingrained colonial prejudice against that writing as second-hand imitations of British literature, but because of the resistance from nationalist critics championing writing in the autochthonous languages of the subcontinent. The tactical solution amongst academics in Australia has been in part to accept the consolidation of the field in the national context and to look beyond the national to historical complex networks of literary production and circulation under Empire and to current networks of diasporic movements in and out of Australia. Among other things Sharrad shares that the current calibration of research publications in Australia and the allocation of research grants threaten steadily to concentrate resources around a few key international journals and narrow interpretations of the national interest.' (Editor's abstract)
Last amended 13 Mar 2024 11:29:43
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