Purple Threads, by Jeanine Leane, embodies country. Images of the land are physically and emotionally evoked in the individual stories that make up this short story cycle, running through the stories as delicately as strands of purple wisteria and as powerfully as the Murrumbidgee River flows and then surges through the countryside where they are set. In this article I aim to demonstrate how two features of the short story cycle - the independence and interrelatedness of the stories in the cycle, and the longer story within the cycle - help to convey the multifarious connections people can have to their country, family and the places they call home. Leane draws on her own experiences to articulate formative incidents in a young girl’s life ...
If autobiographical discourse is a mythologising practice that explores, rehearses and confronts the...
I have never totally found myself in stories of the mountains, nor are stories of Philippine beaches...
This article will argue that Janet Laurence’s and Fiona Foley’s ‘Edge of the Trees’, a permanent ins...
Purple Threads, by Jeanine Leane, embodies country. Images of the land are physically and emotionall...
Feminist theorists have written extensively about the nature of knowledge about, and formed by, wome...
The short story cycle is a collection of independent yet interrelated stories. This thesis is intere...
This chapter explores some of the ethical implications and complexities of writing about girlhood in...
Within this paper we explore the process and outcomes of a year-long exchange that investigates how ...
This article focuses on the representation of girlhood, gender and mateship particular to Australia,...
Narratives of growing-up or coming-of-age, which have traditionally been referred to as Bildungsroma...
Focussing particularly on stylistic tendencies in ‘A Trip to the Coast’, this article situates that ...
Cleven and Lucashenko’s novels are less interested in characters telling their own story than they a...
The paper explores the way the association between people and land shapes identity in ALice Nannup's...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, Margaret Collier Galletti di Cadilhac (1846-1928), a l...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, Margaret Collier Galletti di Cadilhac (1846-1928), a l...
If autobiographical discourse is a mythologising practice that explores, rehearses and confronts the...
I have never totally found myself in stories of the mountains, nor are stories of Philippine beaches...
This article will argue that Janet Laurence’s and Fiona Foley’s ‘Edge of the Trees’, a permanent ins...
Purple Threads, by Jeanine Leane, embodies country. Images of the land are physically and emotionall...
Feminist theorists have written extensively about the nature of knowledge about, and formed by, wome...
The short story cycle is a collection of independent yet interrelated stories. This thesis is intere...
This chapter explores some of the ethical implications and complexities of writing about girlhood in...
Within this paper we explore the process and outcomes of a year-long exchange that investigates how ...
This article focuses on the representation of girlhood, gender and mateship particular to Australia,...
Narratives of growing-up or coming-of-age, which have traditionally been referred to as Bildungsroma...
Focussing particularly on stylistic tendencies in ‘A Trip to the Coast’, this article situates that ...
Cleven and Lucashenko’s novels are less interested in characters telling their own story than they a...
The paper explores the way the association between people and land shapes identity in ALice Nannup's...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, Margaret Collier Galletti di Cadilhac (1846-1928), a l...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, Margaret Collier Galletti di Cadilhac (1846-1928), a l...
If autobiographical discourse is a mythologising practice that explores, rehearses and confronts the...
I have never totally found myself in stories of the mountains, nor are stories of Philippine beaches...
This article will argue that Janet Laurence’s and Fiona Foley’s ‘Edge of the Trees’, a permanent ins...