Judith Wright's (1915-2000) concern about man's disintegration with the natural world and the horror of the destruction of the earth reflects a high sense of ecological awareness caused by the threat of pollution that pervades the environment. Wright's ecopoetry draws attention to the danger of displacing oneself from the natural world that would also cause an inner alienation in man. The purpose of this paper is to explore Wright’s ecopoetical representation of the Australian ecology and its integral connection with Australia’s national unity. As the study examines Wright’s various volumes of poems, it argues that the lack of ecological awareness weakens the national and social fabric of Australia and deteriorates its environment. It also ...
The insular nature of Australia means that historically Europeans first encountered the continent fr...
Eco-centric ideologies recognise humans as an interdependent part of a larger biotic community and t...
This paper focusses on Wright's desire to engage with the absent narrative of indigenous dispossessi...
Les Murray and Judith Wright are two Australian poets who are widely read as landscape poets. While ...
In this thesis I argue that Judith Wright is a dynamic and complex thinker whose coherent ecological...
The recent dramatic evidence that Australia’s largest river system is severely stressed to the point...
This paper is concerned in particular with the engagement with and emergence of a relation with the ...
Paper by Judith Wright delivered at the Australian Literature Seminar, University of New England Ext...
Poetry has fascinated mankind since time immemorial and nature has always been its major theme. But ...
Judith Wright in Generation of Men reconstructs her past generations and their resilient struggle to...
To think ‘environmentally’ or ‘ecologically’, as Buell warns us, requires thinking ‘against’ or beyo...
This paper explores the way silence has been defined and redefined as a means of describing the Aust...
While teaching at the University of Kashmir, Department of English, I encountered Australia’s one of...
In this thesis I examine the ways in which Judith Wright refigures colonial representations of Austr...
A fiercer light honours the life and work of one of Australia’s greatest poets, Judith Wright, who w...
The insular nature of Australia means that historically Europeans first encountered the continent fr...
Eco-centric ideologies recognise humans as an interdependent part of a larger biotic community and t...
This paper focusses on Wright's desire to engage with the absent narrative of indigenous dispossessi...
Les Murray and Judith Wright are two Australian poets who are widely read as landscape poets. While ...
In this thesis I argue that Judith Wright is a dynamic and complex thinker whose coherent ecological...
The recent dramatic evidence that Australia’s largest river system is severely stressed to the point...
This paper is concerned in particular with the engagement with and emergence of a relation with the ...
Paper by Judith Wright delivered at the Australian Literature Seminar, University of New England Ext...
Poetry has fascinated mankind since time immemorial and nature has always been its major theme. But ...
Judith Wright in Generation of Men reconstructs her past generations and their resilient struggle to...
To think ‘environmentally’ or ‘ecologically’, as Buell warns us, requires thinking ‘against’ or beyo...
This paper explores the way silence has been defined and redefined as a means of describing the Aust...
While teaching at the University of Kashmir, Department of English, I encountered Australia’s one of...
In this thesis I examine the ways in which Judith Wright refigures colonial representations of Austr...
A fiercer light honours the life and work of one of Australia’s greatest poets, Judith Wright, who w...
The insular nature of Australia means that historically Europeans first encountered the continent fr...
Eco-centric ideologies recognise humans as an interdependent part of a larger biotic community and t...
This paper focusses on Wright's desire to engage with the absent narrative of indigenous dispossessi...