This article contributes to the critical commentary on boat narratives through a reading of an early and little-known example of a Vietnamese Australian boat story: ‘The Whitish-Grey Dove on the Disorientated Boat’, a serialised novella which was published in Integration: The Magazine for Multicultural and Vietnamese Issues from 1994 to 1998. Focusing on this novella and the magazine in which it appeared serves two objectives: the first is to make the argument that Vietnamese Australian writing has a longer and more active history than may be commonly recognized or acknowledged and that ‘the boat’ is a significant figure in this body of writing from its beginnings; the second is to situate the novella in the context of the diverse range wri...
Hong Kong received 223,302 Vietnamese ‘Boat People’ beginning on May 3, 1975. The last camp in Hong ...
This article considers how recent narratives about Vietnamese refugees engage with the Vietnam War’s...
Many immigrant-receiving countries are characterised by increasing multigenerational ethnocultural d...
This article contributes to the critical commentary on boat narratives through a reading of an early...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
We are Vietnamese - A reflection on being Vietnamese-Australian is a creative non fiction piece conc...
This article offers an overview of the range of Asian-Australian writers, within the context of chan...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
Australian literature has over the last 50 years witnessed the gradual inclusion of writers and text...
After about half a century of establishment and development in Australia, Vietnamese community group...
Vietnamese Australians who arrived in Australia as refugees since the 1970s and later as migrants, h...
Australian literary studies has for some decades recognised the significance and contribution of mul...
In the introductory essay to this collection, Wenche Ommundsen offers an account of the recent emerg...
When did ‘Asian Australian writing’ come into existence? Answering this question is almost as diffic...
The paper investigates the significance of the aporetic presence of Australia in three important wor...
Hong Kong received 223,302 Vietnamese ‘Boat People’ beginning on May 3, 1975. The last camp in Hong ...
This article considers how recent narratives about Vietnamese refugees engage with the Vietnam War’s...
Many immigrant-receiving countries are characterised by increasing multigenerational ethnocultural d...
This article contributes to the critical commentary on boat narratives through a reading of an early...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
We are Vietnamese - A reflection on being Vietnamese-Australian is a creative non fiction piece conc...
This article offers an overview of the range of Asian-Australian writers, within the context of chan...
This special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the result of a collaboration with the So...
Australian literature has over the last 50 years witnessed the gradual inclusion of writers and text...
After about half a century of establishment and development in Australia, Vietnamese community group...
Vietnamese Australians who arrived in Australia as refugees since the 1970s and later as migrants, h...
Australian literary studies has for some decades recognised the significance and contribution of mul...
In the introductory essay to this collection, Wenche Ommundsen offers an account of the recent emerg...
When did ‘Asian Australian writing’ come into existence? Answering this question is almost as diffic...
The paper investigates the significance of the aporetic presence of Australia in three important wor...
Hong Kong received 223,302 Vietnamese ‘Boat People’ beginning on May 3, 1975. The last camp in Hong ...
This article considers how recent narratives about Vietnamese refugees engage with the Vietnam War’s...
Many immigrant-receiving countries are characterised by increasing multigenerational ethnocultural d...