Rozprawy doktorskie na temat „Contemporary Australian fiction”
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Dallmann, Tino [Verfasser]. "Telling Terror in Contemporary Australian Fiction / Tino Dallmann". Frankfurt : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2016. http://d-nb.info/1105292754/34.
Pełny tekst źródłaReid, Michelle. "National identity in contemporary Australian and Canadian science fiction". Thesis, University of Reading, 2005. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.413934.
Pełny tekst źródłaMcGuire, Myles T. "Fruitful approaches: Queer Theory and Historical Materialism in contemporary Australian fiction". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2022. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/230862/1/Myles_McGuire_Thesis.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaBach, Lisa [Verfasser]. "Spatial Belonging: Approaching Aboriginal Australian Spaces in Contemporary Fiction / Lisa Bach". Gießen : Universitätsbibliothek, 2020. http://d-nb.info/121614284X/34.
Pełny tekst źródłaHuggan, Graham. "Territorial disputes : maps and mapping strategies in contemporary Canadian and Australian fiction". Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29115.
Pełny tekst źródłaArts, Faculty of
English, Department of
Graduate
Weeda-Zuidersma, Jeannette Weeda-Zuidersma Jeannette. "Keeping mum representations of motherhood in contemporary Australian literature : a fictocritical exploration /". Connect to this title online, 2006. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2007.0054/.
Pełny tekst źródłaHam, Rosalie, i rosalieh@optusnet com au. "Representations of men and women of the bush in Australian fiction". RMIT University. Creative Media, 2007. http://adt.lib.rmit.edu.au/adt/public/adt-VIT20080110.100527.
Pełny tekst źródłaBode, Katherine. "In/visibility : women looking at men's bodies in and through contemporary Australian women's fiction /". [St. Lucia, Qld.], 2005. http://adt.library.uq.edu.au/public/adt-QU20060120.161127/index.html.
Pełny tekst źródłaWeeda-Zuidersma, Jeannette. "Keeping mum : representations of motherhood in contemporary Australian literature - a fictocritical exploration". University of Western Australia. School of Social and Cultural Studies, 2007. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2007.0054.
Pełny tekst źródłaEmanuel, Elizabeth Frances. "Writing the oriental woman : an examination of the representation of Japanese women in contemporary Australian crime fiction". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2009. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/64475/1/Elizabeth_Emanuel_Exegesis.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaKenny, Laura Jean. ""Something's happening here! Something's awry!": A creative and critical exploration of 'awryness' in contemporary Australian attachment trauma fiction". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2021. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/210856/1/Laura_Kenny_Thesis.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaAlmond, Rosslyn. "Good girls and tough guys, prigs and pornographers: Constructions of gender and sexuality in recent and contemporary Australian fiction". Thesis, Australian Catholic University, 2015. https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/54e133835086579963969bc87c8f587fb008b6976879a094c0169df75d054ebb/1599847/201503_ROSSLYN_ALMOND.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaRobb, Simon. "Fictocritical sentences". 2001, 2001. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phr631.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaLiu, Yuanhang. "Reifungsromane vis-à-vis Social Novels about Older Women: A Comparative Study on Fiction about Female Ageing in Contemporary Australian and Chinese Literature". Thesis, Curtin University, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80628.
Pełny tekst źródłaCruz, Talita Mochiute. "A ficção australiana de J. M. Coetzee: o romance autorreflexivo contemporâneo". Universidade de São Paulo, 2015. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8151/tde-10092015-160114/.
Pełny tekst źródłaThis dissertation presents a reading of J. M. Coetzees so-called Australian fiction comprising the works Elizabeth Costello (2003), Slow Man (2005), and Diary of a Bad Year (2007). These novels, belonging to the authors late prose, share core aesthetic and ethical issues. They are meaningful works characterized by self-reflexive inflection. This study follows Elizabeth Costello and Señor C in their writer-characters constitution and journey to discuss how the presence of the writers double, as literary device, destabilizes the notions of author, character, and narrator, as well as it blurs the boundaries between fiction and non-fiction. The dramatization of the creative process in the center of Coetzees works is another focus of analysis aiming to understand the impossibility of staging the novel in formal realism patterns. This work also attempts to suggest Coetzees response on the validity of the novel in the contemporary world.
Truter, Victoria Zea. "Dreamscape and death : an analysis of three contemporary novels and a film". Thesis, Rhodes University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012976.
Pełny tekst źródłaCain, Lara Anne. "Reading Culture : the translation and transfer of Australianness in contemporary fiction". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2001. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/15785/1/Lara_Cain_Thesis.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaCain, Lara Anne. "Reading Culture: the translation and transfer of Australianness in contemporary fiction". Queensland University of Technology, 2001. http://eprints.qut.edu.au/15785/.
Pełny tekst źródłaStaniforth, Martin John. "Re-imagining the convicts : history, myth and nation in contemporary Australian fictions of early convictism". Thesis, University of Leeds, 2015. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/10463/.
Pełny tekst źródłaHolliday, Penny. "The shifting city : a study of contemporary fictional representations Of Melbourne's inner and outer suburban spaces". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2017. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/103101/4/Penelope_Holliday_Thesis.pdf.
Pełny tekst źródłaDagg, Samantha. "Still digging: from grunge to post-grunge in Australian fiction". Thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1342404.
Pełny tekst źródłaThe Minimum of Getting By is a collection of short fiction in the dirty realist style, set in the urban environment of contemporary Australia. The collection centres on the inner lives of a cast of marginalised characters, all of whom are stuck in some way – in bad relationships, in self-destructive patterns, in the past, in their own heads. There is rarely much in the way of narrative action but, when it does occur, it is often cyclic, returning the characters emotionally, if not physically, to the same place from which they began. The manuscript draws inspiration from the Australian grunge fiction of the 1990s, utilising many of its techniques, including its inner-city settings, its minimal narratives, its emotional bleakness and sometimes-autobiographical/always-confessional tone. Far from merely replicating grunge fiction, however, I have attempted to create a type of ‘post-grunge’ literature by critically engaging with the themes and archetypes of grunge, and reinventing them in a contemporary setting. In the accompanying exegesis, ‘Digging in the Dirt’, I look at the original grunge fiction as well as proposing ‘post-grunge’, a current movement in Australian writing to which the creative manuscript belongs. In the first section of the exegesis, I provide a brief overview of the grunge lit phenomenon of the 1990s, isolating a number of the key techniques and tropes of the genre, including the gritty urban setting; the linear narrative; the ‘confessional I’ narrator; the assumption of autobiographical content; the subcultural affiliations; and, finally, the ‘disrupted individual’ archetype, and its gendered archetypes, the ‘transient female’ and ‘static male’. In the second section, I discuss the work of Kalinda Ashton and Luke Carman in terms of a post-grunge framework, looking at the differing ways both authors have interpreted and reinvented ‘grunge’ in their own writing, with particular emphasis on the archetypes of the ‘post-grunge male’ and the ‘static female’. I also place my own manuscript within this framework, discussing the individual stories in terms of their differing relationships to a grunge and post-grunge style of literatures.
Collier, Stella Catherine Juliet. "'Long strange ride' & The lure of the road in contemporary Australian fiction". Thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10453/43434.
Pełny tekst źródłaNO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access is restricted indefinitely. The hardcopy may be available for consultation at the UTS Library.
The journey is an age-old literary device and its contemporary manifestation, the road story, is more commonly told through the medium of cinema. Can such a clichéd narrative structure tell us anything new? What makes an Australian road novel uniquely Australian and can it ever be more than a pale imitation of its American counterparts? The creative portion of my Master of Creative Arts thesis consists of the first two parts of a projected three-part road novel, Long Strange Ride. Set in Australia around the time of the Port Arthur massacre, the novel is narrated by 26 year-old Kaz, an inner-west lesbian working in a bar. In Part One, at her mother’s funeral Kaz meets her estranged father and his six-year old daughter Kiera. Over the next few months the two half-sisters become friends and when Kiera arrives one day with a broken arm, Kaz decides to take her away from her parents. They set out on a road trip that leads them to Broken Hill, where they find shelter with an old friend. In Part Two Kaz tells the story of Holly, her other little sister, whose unhappy life and teenage death she blames on their father and on herself; her story has cast a shadow over Kaz’s life and Kiera’s arrival has transformed Kaz’s guilt into action. In Part Three (which has not been submitted for examination) their father and the police arrive in Broken Hill and Kaz continues to hide with Kiera, heading ultimately to confrontation and a choice she must make between violence and forgiveness. The exegesis, The Lure of the Road in Contemporary Australian Fiction, examines three Australian road novels (Last Ride by Denise Young, Floundering by Romy Ash and The Low Road by Chris Womersley) and seeks to establish whether this sub-genre of contemporary fiction can be considered uniquely Australian. It engages with the key themes that emerged in the writing of Long Strange Ride that are also defining features of the three texts – the mythology of place, gender, family and social marginalisation. The critical stance is informed by the available critical literature, the most significant of these being Delia Falconer’s work on Australian road writing. It also refers to the complex and wide-ranging discussion of place and Australian national identity, drawing upon the work of Roslyn Haynes, Ross Gibson and Don Watson and showing how these three texts reflect the contradictions at the heart of Australian national mythology. While the figure of the bushman on the land is idealized, the landscape itself is demonized, perpetuating the theme of the hostile wilderness. Assessing the damaging impact of the journey upon the characters and their relationships, I argue that the lure of the road is deceptive and that the road itself is dangerous and untrustworthy. This negative characterization of the road implies a parallel affirmation of everything that the road is not – home, the feminine, family, nurture, society and belonging. In its characterization of the road and the landscape, the Australian road novel provides a distinctive narrative that privileges home over the empty promise of the journey and an encounter with a hostile land.
Lynn, Jenna-Lee Delle. "Negotiating dark matter: trauma and ecology in the fiction of contemporary Australian women writers". Thesis, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1407778.
Pełny tekst źródłaThis thesis examines Janette Turner Hospital’s novels within the context of sites and expressions of trauma: locally, nationally and globally. Its focus is on rereading representations of trauma that destabilise dominant discourses about memory, place, nationality, community and gender. This dissertation also argues for a new interpretative paradigm for reading texts that deal with trauma and proposes a lens comprising eco-feminism and trauma theory. The framework I have created explores the phenomenon of trauma in literature as one of the defining features of human nature that shapes our ecological ontologies. Reading Turner Hospital’s fiction through a colloquy of trauma theory and eco-feminism shows how sites of wounding, embodied in land, the human form, art and music, can be reimagined to acknowledge the personal and cultural significance of working through pain. Using traumatic sites of national and global significance in Turner Hospital’s work also invites a reconsideration of trauma theory through examining different modes of hearing about and engaging with wounding to actualise bodily and psychic restoration. The major focus of my research is on the ways that eco-critical concerns interact with trauma and how this approach to reading Australian women’s fiction provides deeper understanding of trauma’s impact, both at the literal and metaphysical levels of experience. A case study of selected texts from Turner Hospital’s collection of writing will be used in conjunction with Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria and Lily Brett’s Too Many Men to examine how trauma affects Australia’s immigrant culture, mobilises the dispossession of its Indigenous people and speaks to discourses that are of international concern, including Australia’s vulnerability to the threat of international terrorism and the ways we respond to situations that violate basic human rights. The selection of Australian texts written by women provides a rich context for examining ongoing personal, national and global issues that underpin trauma.
Lovat, Amy Terese. "Halfway to nowhere: liminal female journeys as "coming of awareness" in contemporary Australian fiction". Thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1322136.
Pełny tekst źródłaThis thesis contains a novella, Halfway to Nowhere, and an accompanying exegesis. Halfway to Nowhere: Liminal Female Journeys as “Coming of Awareness” in Contemporary Australian Fiction is an exegetical response to the creative artefact that draws on literary theory, close reading of texts, and self-reflexive questioning to understand how the liminal space between adolescence and adulthood is represented in examples of contemporary Australian fiction. I align myself with my protagonist, El, as caught between two recognised life stages, and use autoethnographic honesty and experiential knowledge as an integral narrative thread. Using Halfway to Nowhere and four contemporary Australian works of fiction, this exegesis reappropriates the coming of age to a “coming of awareness” that is defined by several moments of transition, realisation, or epiphany. I posit that contemporaneous narration to focus the present moment, and open-ended narrative, are effective techniques for demonstrating the ongoing process of self-creation. Halfway to Nowhere is a coming-of-awareness story in a time when a search for identity isn’t limited to high school, puberty, and teenagehood. Rather than a Young Adult fiction novel or a bildungsroman text, Halfway to Nowhere is an experimental narrative about a 20-something female character straddling adolescence and adulthood, on a journey of self-discovery in her particular time and space. In leaving the ending of my novella open, I have hoped to transcend a traditionally linear narrative arc and allow readers to interpret the story through their own lens of understanding. I also hope that the experimental, self-conscious narration of Halfway to Nowhere offers the reader opportunity to reflect on their own transition to adulthood, as I have done throughout the exegesis.
Gabriel, Matthew. "Deterrence vivarium: a collection of stories and exegesis". Thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/105381.
Pełny tekst źródłaThesis (M.Phil.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, 2017.
Davidson, Kristy Lee. "Is that what you’re wearing? Gender diversity in contemporary fiction, a novel and exegesis". Thesis, 2012. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/21487/.
Pełny tekst źródłaFlanagan, Willanski Cassie. "Here where we live: the evolution of contemporary white Australian writers’ responses to white settler status". Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/85506.
Pełny tekst źródłaThesis (M.A.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, 2012
Dalley, Hamish. "Postcolonialism and the historical novel : allegorical realism and contemporary literature of the past in Nigeria, Australia and New Zealand". Phd thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/155168.
Pełny tekst źródłaAtherfold, Joanna. "Watermark: a short story cycle". Thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1309822.
Pełny tekst źródłaWatermark is a short story cycle exploring intergenerational and personal relationships in coastal communities. The stories observe the complexity of characters drawn together, but also separated, by family, topography and circumstance. Written to reflect experiences from the 1960s through to present times, the stories reveal individuals responding to the uncertainty and disorder of life-changing events and unexpected revelations. Located in a quintessentially Australian landscape, the characters transgress physical and metaphorical boundaries and experience pivotal moments of transformation, even if – and, as it will be argued, because – those times are fleeting or unsustainable. The stories oscillate between their autonomous status and their interconnection within the broader narrative framework of the short story cycle. This structural aesthetic enables continuity through recurring characters, settings and themes. Paradoxically, these elements combine to reflect fractured relationships and unstable characters against a backdrop that is constantly changing. The exegesis draws on the notion of liminality to explore the generic and thematic concerns that emerged during the composition of the stories, particularly in relation to the oppositions and paradoxes evinced above. It looks at the complexities and challenges of the short story cycle with close reference to three short story cycles with coastal settings – The Bodysurfers by Robert Drewe, The Turning by Tim Winton and Having Cried Wolf by Gretchen Shirm. These texts reveal that Australian short story writers regard the coastline as more than simply a setting; it is a place of transition and a viable site to explore character development and transformation.
Muirden, Sallie. "We too shall be mothers : her story, our story, history: feminism and postmodernism in the contemporary historical novel". Thesis, 2001. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/18195/.
Pełny tekst źródłaGarretson, Anna. "Unsettling fictions : contemporary white writing from South Africa and Australia". Phd thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/151206.
Pełny tekst źródłaFarca, Paula Anca. "Roots to routes contemporary indigenous fiction by women writers in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand /". 2009. http://digital.library.okstate.edu/etd/Farca_okstate_0664D_10631.pdf.
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