Australia's most durable novel, For the Term of His Natural Life, places Marcus Clarke at the pinnacle of Australia's literary ancestry. His magnum opus has antecedents in his journalism but few scholars have recognised the extent to which Clarke's reportage influenced his fiction. This paper argues he treated journalism and fiction as companions in language, information gathering, theme and truth telling
This dissertation proposes an original contribution to knowledge in two ways. First, it proposes tha...
Published online: 28 Mar 2019.John Clarke delighted audiences with his satire for many years. He was...
Described by Walter Bagehot as a novelist who was \u27a special correspondent for posterity\u27, Cha...
places Marcus Clarke at the pinnacle of Australia’s literary ancestry. His magnum opus has anteceden...
While Marcus Clarke’s For the Term of His Natural Life is unquestionably a valuable contribution to ...
The article discusses Clarke's essay on 'Modern Art and Gustave Dore' and relates this to Clarke's o...
Contains the first chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLare...
The history of newspapers and novels parallel each other in many ways, yet links between journalism ...
This is the first book to examine the work of Austin Clarke (1896-1974) in the light of modern criti...
This is the first book to examine the work of Austin Clarke (1896-1974) in the light of modern criti...
By the close of the nineteenth century, Australian writers and critics generally agreed that 'the wr...
Contains the fourth chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLar...
Contains the fourth chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLar...
Typescript."This thesis provided the basic text for a revision which was published in 1958 as 'Marcu...
While childhood history is neglected, troubled childhoods and the disenchantment of the child’s worl...
This dissertation proposes an original contribution to knowledge in two ways. First, it proposes tha...
Published online: 28 Mar 2019.John Clarke delighted audiences with his satire for many years. He was...
Described by Walter Bagehot as a novelist who was \u27a special correspondent for posterity\u27, Cha...
places Marcus Clarke at the pinnacle of Australia’s literary ancestry. His magnum opus has anteceden...
While Marcus Clarke’s For the Term of His Natural Life is unquestionably a valuable contribution to ...
The article discusses Clarke's essay on 'Modern Art and Gustave Dore' and relates this to Clarke's o...
Contains the first chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLare...
The history of newspapers and novels parallel each other in many ways, yet links between journalism ...
This is the first book to examine the work of Austin Clarke (1896-1974) in the light of modern criti...
This is the first book to examine the work of Austin Clarke (1896-1974) in the light of modern criti...
By the close of the nineteenth century, Australian writers and critics generally agreed that 'the wr...
Contains the fourth chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLar...
Contains the fourth chapter of The Dream and the Reality, an unpublished literary work by John McLar...
Typescript."This thesis provided the basic text for a revision which was published in 1958 as 'Marcu...
While childhood history is neglected, troubled childhoods and the disenchantment of the child’s worl...
This dissertation proposes an original contribution to knowledge in two ways. First, it proposes tha...
Published online: 28 Mar 2019.John Clarke delighted audiences with his satire for many years. He was...
Described by Walter Bagehot as a novelist who was \u27a special correspondent for posterity\u27, Cha...