Christina Stead and the Socialist Heritage
Author : Michael Ackland
Publisher :
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 23,88 MB
Release : 2016
Category : LITERARY CRITICISM
ISBN : 9781624999574
Author : Michael Ackland
Publisher :
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 23,88 MB
Release : 2016
Category : LITERARY CRITICISM
ISBN : 9781624999574
Author : Fiona Morrison
Publisher : Sydney University Press
Page : 286 pages
File Size : 37,64 MB
Release : 2019-10-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1743324502
Although Christina Stead is best known for the mid-century masterpiece set in Washington D.C. and Baltimore, The Man Who Loved Children, it was not her only work about the America. Five of Christina Stead’s mid-career novels deal with the United States, capturing and critiquing American life with characteristic sharpness and originality. In this examination of Stead’s American work, Fiona Morrison explores Stead’s profound engagement with American politics and culture and their influence on her “restlessly experimental” style. Through the turbulent political and artistic debates of the 1930s, the Second World War, and the emergence of McCarthyism, the “matter” of America provoked Stead to continue to create new ways of writing about politics, gender and modernity. This is the first critical study to focus on Stead’s time in America and its influence on her writing. Morrison argues compellingly that Stead’s American novels “reveal the work of the greatest political woman writer of the mid twentieth century”, and that Stead’s account of American ideology and national identity remains extraordinarily prescient, even today.
Author : A. D. Cousins
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 181 pages
File Size : 31,91 MB
Release : 2024-10-03
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1036406261
How A. D. Hope interpreted and reacted to modernity (and modernism) has been energetically discussed for some time. What aspects of modernity did he find useful, or prize? What precisely did he dislike, and why? How did he make use even—sometimes, especially—of what he disliked? This book offers fresh answers to such questions from some of Australia's best-known scholars. It is a volume that will be of interest to undergraduates and professional academics alike.
Author : Paul Crosthwaite
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 14,5 MB
Release : 2024-02-29
Category : History
ISBN : 0198891792
Speculative Time examines how a climate of financial and economic speculation and disaster shaped the literary culture of the United States in the early to mid-twentieth century. It argues that speculation's risk-laden and crisis-prone temporalities had major impacts on writing in the period, and on important aspects of visual representation.
Author : Robert Dixon
Publisher : Sydney University Press
Page : 396 pages
File Size : 22,80 MB
Release : 2010
Category : History
ISBN : 1920899669
Reading Across the Pacific is a study of literary and cultural engagement between the United States and Australia from a contemporary interdisciplinary perspective. The book examines the relations of the two countries, shifting the emphasis from the broad cultural patterns that are often compared, to the specific networks, interactions, and crossings that have characterised Australian literature in the United States and American literature in Australia. In the 21st century, both American and Australian literatures are experiencing new challenges to the very different paradigms of literary history and criticism each inherited from the 20th century. In response to these challenges, scholars of both literatures are seizing the opportunity to reassess and reconfigure the conceptual geography of national literary spaces as they are reformed by vectors that evade or exceed them, including the transnational, the local and the global. The essays in Reading Across the Pacific are divided into five sections: 'National literatures and transnationalism', 'Poetry and poetics', 'Literature and popular culture', 'The Cold War', and 'Publishing history and transpacific print cultures'.
Author : David Carter
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 826 pages
File Size : 38,6 MB
Release : 2023-05-31
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1009093207
The Cambridge History of the Australian Novel is an authoritative volume on the Australian novel by more than forty experts in the field of Australian literary studies, drawn from within Australia and abroad. Essays cover a wide range of types of novel writing and publishing from the earliest colonial period through to the present day. The international dimensions of publishing Australian fiction are also considered as are the changing contours of criticism of the novel in Australia. Chapters examine colonial fiction, women's writing, Indigenous novels, popular genre fiction, historical fiction, political novels, and challenging novels on identity and belonging from recent decades, not least the major rise of Indigenous novel writing. Essays focus on specific periods of major change in Australian history or range broadly across themes and issues that have influenced fiction across many years and in many parts of the country.
Author : Jonathan Arac
Publisher : Fordham Univ Press
Page : 224 pages
File Size : 50,9 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 082323178X
This volume records a critic's three decades of thinking about the connection between literature and the conditions of people's lives. A preference for impurity and a search for how to explain it are threads in this book as its chapters pursue the entanglements of culture, politics, and society from which great literature arises.
Author : Michael Ackland
Publisher : Cambria Australian Literature
Page : 262 pages
File Size : 21,6 MB
Release : 2016-11-25
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781604979336
Christina Stead (1902-1983) was an Australian novelist and short-story writer acclaimed for her satirical wit and penetrating psychological characterizations. In this book, author Michael Ackland argues that the single most important influence on Stead's life, socialism, has been seriously neglected in studies of her life and work.
Author : Harold Veeser
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 338 pages
File Size : 31,69 MB
Release : 2013-12-19
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1317761200
Following Clifford Geertz and other cultural anthropologists, the New Historicist critics have evolved a method for describing culture in action. Their "thick descriptions" seize upon an event or anecdote--colonist John Rolfe's conversation with Pocohontas's father, a note found among Nietzsche's papers to the effect that "I have lost my umbrella"--and re-read it to reveal through the analysis of tiny particulars the motive forces controlling a whole society. Contributors: Stephen J. Greenblatt, Louis A. Montrose, Catherine Gallagher, Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, Gerald Graff, Jean Franco, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Frank Lentricchia, Vincent Pecora, Jane Marcus, Jon Klancher, Jonathan Arac, Hayden White, Stanley Fish, Judith Newton, Joel Fineman, John Schaffer, Richard Terdiman, Donald Pease, Brooks Thomas.
Author : Christina Stead
Publisher : Open Road Media
Page : 733 pages
File Size : 34,45 MB
Release : 2012-10-23
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 1453265252
“This crazy, gorgeous family novel” written at the end of the Great Depression “is one of the great literary achievements of the twentieth century” (Jonathan Franzen, The New York Times). First published in 1940, The Man Who Loved Children was rediscovered in 1965 thanks to the poet Randall Jarrell’s eloquent introduction (included in this ebook edition), which compares Christina Stead to Leo Tolstoy. Today, it stands as a masterpiece of dysfunctional family life. In a country crippled by the Great Depression, Sam and Henny Pollit have too much—too much contempt for one another, too many children, too much strain under endless obligation. Flush with ego and chilling charisma, Sam torments and manipulates his children in an esoteric world of his own imagining. Henny looks on desperately, all too aware of the madness at the root of her husband’s behavior. And Louie, the damaged, precocious adolescent girl at the center of their clashes, is the “ugly duckling” whose struggle will transfix contemporary readers. Named one of the best novels of the twentieth century by Newsweek, Stead’s semiautobiographical work reads like a Depression-era The Glass Castle. In the New York Times, Jonathan Franzen wrote of this classic, “I carry it in my head the way I carry childhood memories; the scenes are of such precise horror and comedy that I feel I didn’t read the book so much as live it.”