The Swan Book (pub. 2013) by the Indigenous-Australian author Alexis Wright is an eco-dystopian epic about the Indigenous people’s tough struggle to regain the environmental balance of the Australian continent and recover their former habitat. The book envisions a dire future in which all Australian flora and fauna—humans included—are under threat, suffering, displaced, and dying out as the result of Western colonization and its exploitative treatment of natural resources. The Swan Book goes beyond the geographical and epistemological scope of Wright’s previous two novels, Plains of Promise (pub. 1997) and Carpentaria (pub. 2006) to imagine what the Australian continent at large will look like under the ongoing pressure of the Western, expl...
The Aboriginal author Alexis Wright’s novels Plains of Promise, Carpentaria and The Swan Book have p...
Literary criticism, particularly ecocriticism, occupies an uneasy position with regard to activism: ...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
This book is set in the future, with Aboriginals still living under the Intervention in the north, i...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
This exegesis is prefaced with an introduction to finding the “real” site of remote Aboriginal commu...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesI argue that through representations of ‘madness’ in The Swan Boo...
One of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous authors, Alexis Wright, stages the fleeting presenc...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
In Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), Alexis Wright establishes an allegorical mode where ...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
Following the 1992 Mabo Decision which overturned the historical myth of terra nullius and its decla...
The Aboriginal author Alexis Wright’s novels Plains of Promise, Carpentaria and The Swan Book have p...
Literary criticism, particularly ecocriticism, occupies an uneasy position with regard to activism: ...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
This book is set in the future, with Aboriginals still living under the Intervention in the north, i...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
This exegesis is prefaced with an introduction to finding the “real” site of remote Aboriginal commu...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesI argue that through representations of ‘madness’ in The Swan Boo...
One of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous authors, Alexis Wright, stages the fleeting presenc...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
In Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), Alexis Wright establishes an allegorical mode where ...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
Following the 1992 Mabo Decision which overturned the historical myth of terra nullius and its decla...
The Aboriginal author Alexis Wright’s novels Plains of Promise, Carpentaria and The Swan Book have p...
Literary criticism, particularly ecocriticism, occupies an uneasy position with regard to activism: ...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...