Australia has been seen as a land of both punishment and refuge. Australian literature has explored these controlling alternatives, and vividly rendered the landscape on which they transpire. Twentieth-century writers left Australia to see the world; now Australia’s distance no longer provides sanctuary. But today the global perspective has arrived with a vengeance. In Contemporary Australian Literature: A World Not Yet Dead, Nicholas Birns tells the story of how novelists, poets and critics, from Patrick White to Hannah Kent, from Alexis Wright to Christos Tsiolkas, responded to this condition. With rancour, concern and idealism, modern Australian literature conveys a tragic sense of the past yet an abiding vision of the way forward. Birns paints a vivid picture of a rich Australian literary voice – one not lost to the churning of global markets, but in fact given new life by it. Contrary to the despairing of the critics, Australian literary identity continues to flourish. And as Birns finds, it is not one thing, but many. "In this remarkable, bold and fearless book, Nicholas Birns contests how literary cultures are read, how they are constituted and what they stand for … In examining the nature of the barriers between public and private utterance, and looking outside the absurdity of the rules of genre, Birns has produced a redemptive analysis that leaves hope for revivifying a world not yet dead." - John Kinsella
In Contemporary Australian Literature: A World Not Yet Dead, Nicholas Birns tells the story of how novelists, poets and critics, from Patrick White to Hannah Kent, from Alexis Wright to Christos Tsiolkas, responded to this condition.
Derrida quoted by Davis, Gangland, pp.l63—4. . Robert Manne, 'Old Gang Has Something To Offer', Sydney Morning Herald (22 Sept. 1997). . Andrew Reimer in 'Symposium: Are There Gangsters and Gatekeepers?” Australian Book Review, No.196 ...
This book analyses the ways in which contemporary women writers in the two 'settler' colonies of Australia and South Africa explore notions of self, identity and place in their fiction.
Steven, Laurence, Dissociation and Wholeness in the Fiction of Patrick White, Wilfrid Laurier UP, 1989. Tacey, David, Patrick White: Fiction and the Unconscious, OUP, 1988. Walsh, William, Patrick White's Fiction, A&U, 1977.
Exploring Suburbia is the first book-length study of suburbia in Australian literature; it addresses a long-neglected and underexamined area within Australian literature and analyzes novels by some of Australia's most important writers from ...
T. Inglis Moore's Social Patterns in Australian Literature (Berkeley: University of California Press. 1971) provides an early and scrupulous recognition of the distinctive national tradition of Australian literature.
THOMAS KENEALLY The Place at Whitton, 1964 The Fear, 1965 Bring Larks and Heroes, 1967 Three Cheers for the Paraclete, 1968 The Survivor, 1969 A Dutiful Daughter, 1971 The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, 1972 Blood Red, Sister Rose, ...
... A Little Tea, A Little Chat, only softened a little by the recollection of New York in The People with the Dogs from the precarious locus of post- war Europe. In flight from growing McCarthyism in the States, Stead and Blake set sail ...
Critiques both the view of Europe held by contemporary Australian writers and poets, and the view of Australia held by contemporary writers of Slovenian origin or connection.
As no literature can claim to be monolithic, the essays collected in this book examine the various ways in which different European literary traditions were mediated and blended through individual Australian poets into Australian literature ...