The paper focuses on two bush novels published in 1923: E.L. Grant Watson's The Desert Horizon and Marie Bjelke Petersen's Jewelled Nights arguing that they tilt the scales of mateship towards a subversive homo-erotic reading than other Austrlaian novels
The paper argues that Hanrahan, rather than taking her identity from the landscape that was presente...
This article preovides a postcolonial reading of Rodney Hall's novel, "The Second Bridegroom". In a ...
This thesis examines the attitudes to love and sex reflected in eight Canadian novels dating from 19...
This paper traces the impact of Watson's experiences in Western Australia on the development of his ...
The paper examines the way the desert functions in Grant Watson's novels Desert Horizon and Daimon a...
At the heart of this exegesis is the city-bush gap and the rivalry and stereotypes that gap has gene...
Abstract: In the 1950s, bush settings were strong favourites for children’s novels, which often too...
The paper discusses Mrs W. I. Thrower's novel Younah!: A Tasmanian Aboriginal Romance of the Catara...
My purpose in this study is to examine a number of\ud Australian novels which portray love relations...
[T]he mind and the terrain shape each other: every landscape is a landscape of desire to some degree...
Marie Bjelke Petersen was a prolific writer of popular romance fiction in the early twentieth centur...
Thomas Hardy’s Wessex sets a stage for tragedy as an ultimate end to the struggles of individuals ca...
My dissertation is a study of the travel writings of three nineteenth-century American authors, Herm...
The first section of this paper examines the formation and portrayal of female/lesbian identity with...
When I first read Patrick White\u27s novel A Fringe of Leaves (1976) some years ago I was interested...
The paper argues that Hanrahan, rather than taking her identity from the landscape that was presente...
This article preovides a postcolonial reading of Rodney Hall's novel, "The Second Bridegroom". In a ...
This thesis examines the attitudes to love and sex reflected in eight Canadian novels dating from 19...
This paper traces the impact of Watson's experiences in Western Australia on the development of his ...
The paper examines the way the desert functions in Grant Watson's novels Desert Horizon and Daimon a...
At the heart of this exegesis is the city-bush gap and the rivalry and stereotypes that gap has gene...
Abstract: In the 1950s, bush settings were strong favourites for children’s novels, which often too...
The paper discusses Mrs W. I. Thrower's novel Younah!: A Tasmanian Aboriginal Romance of the Catara...
My purpose in this study is to examine a number of\ud Australian novels which portray love relations...
[T]he mind and the terrain shape each other: every landscape is a landscape of desire to some degree...
Marie Bjelke Petersen was a prolific writer of popular romance fiction in the early twentieth centur...
Thomas Hardy’s Wessex sets a stage for tragedy as an ultimate end to the struggles of individuals ca...
My dissertation is a study of the travel writings of three nineteenth-century American authors, Herm...
The first section of this paper examines the formation and portrayal of female/lesbian identity with...
When I first read Patrick White\u27s novel A Fringe of Leaves (1976) some years ago I was interested...
The paper argues that Hanrahan, rather than taking her identity from the landscape that was presente...
This article preovides a postcolonial reading of Rodney Hall's novel, "The Second Bridegroom". In a ...
This thesis examines the attitudes to love and sex reflected in eight Canadian novels dating from 19...