Examining the late style of a writer is like skirting around quicksand. End-of-career reflection can subvert long standing critical accounts; revisionist publishing histories or newly minted archival work can do likewise. And, as Nancy J. Troy suggests, an artist’s last thoughts are rarely planned as such (15). In the case of Christina Stead any consideration of late style is made more difficult because, chronologically speaking, her ‘late’ works were written some 20 years before her death in 1983. Thus chronology can be deceptive, as Nicholas Delbanco points out in Lastingness: The Art of Old Age. Stead’s last novel, I’m Dying Laughing The Humourist, was completed, at least in rough draft form in 1966, when Stead was 64, but friends and re...
The work of Don DeLillo and Philip Roth has been characterized as a turn to writing novels about lat...
This study examines how selected authors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries write about their...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....
Examining the late style of a writer is like skirting around quicksand. End-of-career reflection ca...
Readers and scholars routinely recognise a certain unpleasant and repellent quality in the fiction o...
Christina Stead's life is at once too well and too little known. Fourteen major works, totally more...
Christina Stead was one of the great Australian writers of the twentieth century. After a revived in...
Christina Stead, who came of age as a writer in the 1930s, enjoyed trans-Atlantic fame before the o...
This paper will examine the ultimately incommensurable divide between the listening ear and speaking...
This chapter examines Christa Wolf’s engagement with lateness and death in her semi-autobiographical...
[Extract]Christina Stead was, as Jose Yglesias rightly highlighted in 1965, a product of the 1930s-i...
Despite waves of interest in the work of Christina Stead, one aspect of her writing life has been la...
This thesis begins with an introductory survey of the various influences which shaped Christina Stea...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
This study examines how selected authors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries write about their...
The work of Don DeLillo and Philip Roth has been characterized as a turn to writing novels about lat...
This study examines how selected authors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries write about their...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....
Examining the late style of a writer is like skirting around quicksand. End-of-career reflection ca...
Readers and scholars routinely recognise a certain unpleasant and repellent quality in the fiction o...
Christina Stead's life is at once too well and too little known. Fourteen major works, totally more...
Christina Stead was one of the great Australian writers of the twentieth century. After a revived in...
Christina Stead, who came of age as a writer in the 1930s, enjoyed trans-Atlantic fame before the o...
This paper will examine the ultimately incommensurable divide between the listening ear and speaking...
This chapter examines Christa Wolf’s engagement with lateness and death in her semi-autobiographical...
[Extract]Christina Stead was, as Jose Yglesias rightly highlighted in 1965, a product of the 1930s-i...
Despite waves of interest in the work of Christina Stead, one aspect of her writing life has been la...
This thesis begins with an introductory survey of the various influences which shaped Christina Stea...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
This study examines how selected authors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries write about their...
The work of Don DeLillo and Philip Roth has been characterized as a turn to writing novels about lat...
This study examines how selected authors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries write about their...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....