Xavier Herbert is one of Australia’s outstanding novelists and one of the more controversial. In his time, he was also an outspoken public figure. Yet many young Australians today have not heard of the man or his novels. His key works Capricornia (1938) and Poor Fellow My Country (1975) won major awards and were judged as highly significant on publication, yet there has been relatively little analysis of their impact. Although providing much material for Baz Luhrmann’s blockbuster film Australia (2008), his works are rarely recommended as texts in school curricula or in universities. Gough Whitlam took a particular interest in the final draft of Poor Fellow My Country, describing it as a work of ‘national significance’ and ensuring the manu...
This article examines the work of a largely forgotten literary intellectual, Alan D. Mickle (1883-19...
Since its publication in 1938 critics have generally read Xavier Herbert’s Capricornia as a national...
Australian historical novels and the History Wars (1998-2008). The period of recent Australian cultu...
Xavier Herbert published his bestseller Capricornia in 1938, following two periods spent in the Nort...
In today’s global celebrity culture it’s hard to imagine a word more over-used and abused than ‘geni...
National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’...
Herbert’s Poor Fellow My Country (1975) anticipated edgy twenty-first century national conversations...
The 1930s in Australia was a period marked by rising awareness of and attention to Australia’s ‘half...
As a biographical documentary concept develops, its intention and its form are impacted and may be t...
This, the first major study of Xavier Herbert’s literary journey, is a superb work of scholarship. I...
The cover of this substantial volume tells you what's coming: it features a photograph of Xavier Her...
Fifteen years after its first publication, Black Words White Page remains as fresh as ever. This awa...
Roger McDonald's first two novels offer an interesting case study of an emerging Australian writer i...
Tim Winton, who gained fame in the 1980’s, was known as a genius child in Australia. He has won the ...
In 1973, the Australian novelist Patrick White was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature for his no...
This article examines the work of a largely forgotten literary intellectual, Alan D. Mickle (1883-19...
Since its publication in 1938 critics have generally read Xavier Herbert’s Capricornia as a national...
Australian historical novels and the History Wars (1998-2008). The period of recent Australian cultu...
Xavier Herbert published his bestseller Capricornia in 1938, following two periods spent in the Nort...
In today’s global celebrity culture it’s hard to imagine a word more over-used and abused than ‘geni...
National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’...
Herbert’s Poor Fellow My Country (1975) anticipated edgy twenty-first century national conversations...
The 1930s in Australia was a period marked by rising awareness of and attention to Australia’s ‘half...
As a biographical documentary concept develops, its intention and its form are impacted and may be t...
This, the first major study of Xavier Herbert’s literary journey, is a superb work of scholarship. I...
The cover of this substantial volume tells you what's coming: it features a photograph of Xavier Her...
Fifteen years after its first publication, Black Words White Page remains as fresh as ever. This awa...
Roger McDonald's first two novels offer an interesting case study of an emerging Australian writer i...
Tim Winton, who gained fame in the 1980’s, was known as a genius child in Australia. He has won the ...
In 1973, the Australian novelist Patrick White was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature for his no...
This article examines the work of a largely forgotten literary intellectual, Alan D. Mickle (1883-19...
Since its publication in 1938 critics have generally read Xavier Herbert’s Capricornia as a national...
Australian historical novels and the History Wars (1998-2008). The period of recent Australian cultu...