This thesis argues that Patrick White’s Voss, Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient and David Malouf’s An Imaginary Life depict landscape in a manner that reveals the inadequacies of imperial epistemological discourses and the rationalist model of subjectivity which enables them. The study demonstrates that these novels all emphasise the instabilities inherent in imperial epistemology. White, Ondaatje and Malouf chart their protagonists’ inability to comprehend and document the landscapes they encounter, and the ways in which this failure calls into question their subjectivity and the epistemologies that underpin it. One of the principal contentions of the study, then, is that the novels under consideration deploy a postmodern aesthetic of...
Patrick White's first five novels reveal much of the writer's personal struggle to resolve the dile...
This article reads Patrick White’s 1957 novel Voss as an early example of Neo-Victorian fiction, a r...
This essay focuses on a postmodern reading of An Imaginary Life by David Malouf. It argues that lang...
This thesis argues that Patrick White’s Voss, Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient and David Malou...
This thesis explores the thematic desire to establish an ecological human bond with nature in four c...
This paper studies David Malouf’s critique of Western strategies of settlement and exploration in hi...
In his novel A Fringe of Leaves (1976), Australian Nobel laureate Patrick White takes up the famous ...
This Master Thesis analyzes An Imaginary Life from a postcolonial perspective in order to work on so...
"Still Life" argues that Patrick White's fiction reveals objects in surprising, unexpected attitudes...
This article investigates the meaning and function of the extreme place of the desert in Patrick Whi...
Chapter of 1971 Monash University M.A. thesis "Patrick White and the Realist Tradition". The eight...
White's fiction is a writing under pressure from the twin claims of being and becoming. In his earl...
This study introduces a multi-disciplinary ecocritical approach to fictional evocations of place in ...
This study of Patrick White's work is chiefly concerned with the first four novels, but refers also ...
A striking pattern of recurring imagery in The English Patient (1992) is reminiscent of the style of...
Patrick White's first five novels reveal much of the writer's personal struggle to resolve the dile...
This article reads Patrick White’s 1957 novel Voss as an early example of Neo-Victorian fiction, a r...
This essay focuses on a postmodern reading of An Imaginary Life by David Malouf. It argues that lang...
This thesis argues that Patrick White’s Voss, Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient and David Malou...
This thesis explores the thematic desire to establish an ecological human bond with nature in four c...
This paper studies David Malouf’s critique of Western strategies of settlement and exploration in hi...
In his novel A Fringe of Leaves (1976), Australian Nobel laureate Patrick White takes up the famous ...
This Master Thesis analyzes An Imaginary Life from a postcolonial perspective in order to work on so...
"Still Life" argues that Patrick White's fiction reveals objects in surprising, unexpected attitudes...
This article investigates the meaning and function of the extreme place of the desert in Patrick Whi...
Chapter of 1971 Monash University M.A. thesis "Patrick White and the Realist Tradition". The eight...
White's fiction is a writing under pressure from the twin claims of being and becoming. In his earl...
This study introduces a multi-disciplinary ecocritical approach to fictional evocations of place in ...
This study of Patrick White's work is chiefly concerned with the first four novels, but refers also ...
A striking pattern of recurring imagery in The English Patient (1992) is reminiscent of the style of...
Patrick White's first five novels reveal much of the writer's personal struggle to resolve the dile...
This article reads Patrick White’s 1957 novel Voss as an early example of Neo-Victorian fiction, a r...
This essay focuses on a postmodern reading of An Imaginary Life by David Malouf. It argues that lang...