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It'll End in Tears: Melancholy in Contemporary Australian Picture Books
Australian Literature Melancholy Contemporary Australian Picture Books
2008/10/16
In 2002, two melancholy picture books featured in Australian children’s literature
awards. Libby Gleeson’s An Ordinary Day, illustrated by Armin Greder, won
the Children’s Book Council of Australia ...
Mothers, Daughters and Elizabeth Jolley's Ethic of Hope
Australian Literature Ethic of Hope
2008/10/16
Ceres was scornful and asked the mother if she imagined that children
could become immortal if they were not tempered in the heat
of the fire.
Who can turn away a son or daughter? The child is alwa...
An Ethics of Mourning: Gail Jones's Black Mirror
Australian Literature An Ethics Black Mirror
2008/10/16
There are two short passages that serve as prologues to Gail Jones’s novel Black
Mirror. The first relates the aesthetic apprehension of Anna Griffin in an inclement
London street: “And later, when ...
Terpsichorean Moments in Patrick White’s The Solid Mandala and Hal Porter’s The Tilted Cross
Australian Literature The Solid Mandala The Tilted Cross
2008/10/16
Those who dance will always dance, will share the privileges of air
fire water, figures of the tireless dance disguised, ashes strewn on the
stagnant surface of the lake a variation on the same them...
Ratbag Writers and Cranky Critics:In Their Praise
Australian Literature Ratbag Writers Cranky Critics
2008/10/15
My title for this paper came from reflecting on the two women honoured by the
2004 ASAL conference and this annual lecture, Thea Astley and Dorothy Green,
outstanding examples of the Australian ratb...
Dance of the Nomad: A Study of the Selected Notebooks of A.D. Hope by Ann McCullough
Australian Literature A.D. Hope
2008/10/15
Dance of the Nomad: A Study of the Selected Notebooks of A.D. Hope by Ann McCullough.
Gail Jones’s “light writing”:Memory and the Photo-graph
Australian Literature light writing Gail Jones
2008/10/13
Photography has been used for many purposes—to memorialise,
propagandise, record, lament and celebrate diverse human experience. Its
status as a realist mode of representation, and as art, has been ...
Operatic Narratives:Textual Transformations in Gwen Harwood’s and Larry Sitsky’s Golem and Lenz
Australian Literature Operatic Narratives Textual Transformations Larry Sitsky Gwen Harwood
2008/10/13
Opera is a special kind of text, characterised by complexity, hybridity and
spectacle. Poet Gwen Harwood and composer Larry Sitsky are celebrated
artists in their own fields but what is perhaps less...
“Impossible Speech” and the Burden of Translation:Lilian’s Story from Page to Screen
Australian Literature Impossible Speech Lilian’s Story Page to Screen
2008/10/13
In her witty “life narrative” which moves from birth to old age, the narrator
of Kate Grenville’s Lilian’s Story offers an idea of history that exists in
a reinvention of personal and collective mem...
For Love Alone? Anorexia and Teresa’s Quest for Love
Australian Literature Anorexia For Love Teresa
2008/10/13
Christina Stead was notoriously shy, while her husband William Blake was more
extroverted: both, however, loved a party (Harris 5). Indeed, Stead derived
great delight from preparing food and drink ...
Being Elsewhere: Aesthetics, Identities and Alienation in Peter Austen’s Life and Poetry
Australian Literature Identities Aesthetics Alienation Peter Austen’s Life Poetry
2008/10/13
Sixty-seven years ago, under the headline BRISBANE POET WHO
TURNED MOSLEM DIES IN EGYPT, the Courier-Mail teased its readers
with what must have seemed a slightly familiar scenario:
Aly Azir-el-Din...
Globalizing Indigenes: Postcolonial Fiction from Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific
Australian Literature New Zealand Postcolonial Fiction the Pacific
2008/10/13
When it was published in 1990, Alan Duff ’s novel Once Were Warriors spent
more than a year at number one on the New Zealand best-seller lists. It
remained in the top ten for the next four years. Th...
George Chamier and the Native Question
Australian Literature Native Question George Chamier
2008/10/13
Figure 1. A still from Moana (or The Love-Life of a South Sea Siren) [1926].
(Reproduced by permission of The Robert and Frances Flaherty Study Center,
Claremont School of Theology, Claremont, Calif...
Prolonged Symptoms of Cultural Anxiety: The Persistance of Narratives of Asian Invasion within Multicultural Australia
Australian Literature Persistance of Narratives Cultural Anxiety Multicultural Australia
2008/10/13
The disjunctive relation between Australia’s vast landmass and small
population has long troubled the Australian settler imagination. In the
latter half of the nineteenth century, in light of the Au...
Insane Lane:Crowds, Contamination and Violence in Australia
Australian Literature Contamination Crowds;Violence
2008/10/9
Searching for a place to begin, I came across Vance Palmer’s Sydney
Jephcott and Francis Adams sitting comfortably together on a Brisbane
veranda; they were talking and gazing idly out onto the road...