Christina Stead (1902–1983) was an Australian novelist and short-story writer acclaimed for her satirical wit and penetrating psychological characterizations. Stead enjoyed an international reputation in the 1930s and beyond, then went out of favor as a communist-affiliated writer, until she was rediscovered by feminist critics. Her standing is considerable, and in Australia she vies with Patrick White for the laurel of finest Australian novelist. In this book, author Michael Ackland argues that the single most important influence on Stead's life, socialism, has been seriously neglected in studies of her life and work. Ackland delves into Stead's political formation prior to her departure for London in 1928, arguing that considerable ins...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....
Bibliography: pages 205-231.This dissertation locates Christina Stead as a woman writer, who interro...
This paper explores how Stead's contact with Marxism and her reading of Nietzsche shape the revoluti...
Christina Stead (1902–1983) was an Australian novelist and short-story writer acclaimed for her sati...
The paper considers the world within that Stead brought to her first novel, made up from a wide rang...
Christina Stead was one of the great Australian writers of the twentieth century. After a revived in...
[Extract]Christina Stead was, as Jose Yglesias rightly highlighted in 1965, a product of the 1930s-i...
Stead composed House of All Nations (1938) at a time of unprecedented economic and political crisis ...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, School of English, Linguistics and Media, 1997.Bibliography: p. ...
Christina Stead's life is at once too well and too little known. Fourteen major works, totally more...
Christina Stead left Australia in 1928 and embraced Marxist-Leninism as the trans-Atlantic stock and...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
The fiction of Christina Stead ( 1902-83) is at last receiving something of its proper recognition a...
This essay analyzes how the literary modes of realism and modernism coexist and interact in Christin...
Readers and scholars routinely recognise a certain unpleasant and repellent quality in the fiction o...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....
Bibliography: pages 205-231.This dissertation locates Christina Stead as a woman writer, who interro...
This paper explores how Stead's contact with Marxism and her reading of Nietzsche shape the revoluti...
Christina Stead (1902–1983) was an Australian novelist and short-story writer acclaimed for her sati...
The paper considers the world within that Stead brought to her first novel, made up from a wide rang...
Christina Stead was one of the great Australian writers of the twentieth century. After a revived in...
[Extract]Christina Stead was, as Jose Yglesias rightly highlighted in 1965, a product of the 1930s-i...
Stead composed House of All Nations (1938) at a time of unprecedented economic and political crisis ...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, School of English, Linguistics and Media, 1997.Bibliography: p. ...
Christina Stead's life is at once too well and too little known. Fourteen major works, totally more...
Christina Stead left Australia in 1928 and embraced Marxist-Leninism as the trans-Atlantic stock and...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
The fiction of Christina Stead ( 1902-83) is at last receiving something of its proper recognition a...
This essay analyzes how the literary modes of realism and modernism coexist and interact in Christin...
Readers and scholars routinely recognise a certain unpleasant and repellent quality in the fiction o...
This article argues that Stead uses the techniques of the satirist to engage with the public sphere....
Bibliography: pages 205-231.This dissertation locates Christina Stead as a woman writer, who interro...
This paper explores how Stead's contact with Marxism and her reading of Nietzsche shape the revoluti...