This exegesis is prefaced with an introduction to finding the “real” site of remote Aboriginal communities within The Swan Book. An examination of the literature identifies the contextual and conceptual depth of the novel and the critical challenges it raises. Michel Foucault’s related concepts of power and heterotopia, the utopian community and heterotopic sites of deviation and resistance are surveyed in order to establish how sovereignty is exercised in postcolonial Australia. The possibility of ethical relations of power raised within The Swan Book are then considered
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
One of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous authors, Alexis Wright, stages the fleeting presenc...
In this thesis I aim to show that literature can provide counter-representations to the settler-colo...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesI argue that through representations of ‘madness’ in The Swan Boo...
The Swan Book (pub. 2013) by the Indigenous-Australian author Alexis Wright is an eco-dystopian epic...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
Alexis Wright is an award-winning Indigenous Australian writer who has brought into the national nar...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
The ways in which European settlers have disrupted Australian lands, and disrupted the relationship ...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
From the 1960s onwards, intellectual movements of contestation have interrogated the concept of "the...
The Aboriginal author Alexis Wright’s novels Plains of Promise, Carpentaria and The Swan Book have p...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
One of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous authors, Alexis Wright, stages the fleeting presenc...
In this thesis I aim to show that literature can provide counter-representations to the settler-colo...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesI argue that through representations of ‘madness’ in The Swan Boo...
The Swan Book (pub. 2013) by the Indigenous-Australian author Alexis Wright is an eco-dystopian epic...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
Alexis Wright is an award-winning Indigenous Australian writer who has brought into the national nar...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
The ways in which European settlers have disrupted Australian lands, and disrupted the relationship ...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
From the 1960s onwards, intellectual movements of contestation have interrogated the concept of "the...
The Aboriginal author Alexis Wright’s novels Plains of Promise, Carpentaria and The Swan Book have p...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
One of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous authors, Alexis Wright, stages the fleeting presenc...
In this thesis I aim to show that literature can provide counter-representations to the settler-colo...