Frank Sargeson's repositioning of Henry Lawson as a 'colonial' writer, away from the more familiar categories of nationalism and realism, offers a provocation for re-considering his own short fiction. In taking up that challenge, this essay diverges from recent attempts to trouble the periodization of writing from the 1930s and 40s: rather than arguing that the concerns of cultural nationalism were anticipated in the nineteenth-century, it will make the case that colonial literary forms and cultural formations persist in some of the most familiar works of that later period
This essay joins in the discussion about the future of national literatures in the shifting formatio...
This essay attempts to untangle a central conceptual and analytical knot in recent New Zealand histo...
In tracing the interconnections of place and people in James Cowan's writing, this article argues th...
The cultural nationalist narrative, and the myths of origin and invention associated with it, cast a...
New Zealand became a dominion in 1907 and joined the Commonwealth in 1931. These markers of independ...
The paper argues that William Lane's 1892 social-realist novel The Workingman's Paradise is symptoma...
This essay is situated in relation to the critical commonplace that the contrasting literary modes a...
This thesis examines changes in the relationship between romance and realism in the New Zealand shor...
The thesis will be an investigation of the history of the short story in New Zealand, attempting to ...
Dominant theorizations of settler colonialism identify it as a social form characterized by a proble...
Frank Sargeson’s stories and novels often contain violent episodes. These have generally been interp...
<p>This dissertation argues that the literary, intellectual, and cultural borders of Victorian Brita...
This essay provides a critical overview of James Cowan’s writings, his methods, and his publishing h...
This thesis examines the relationship between utopianism and nationalism in New Zealand literature b...
For better or worse, literary modernism has long been associated with cosmopolitanism. Yet modernism...
This essay joins in the discussion about the future of national literatures in the shifting formatio...
This essay attempts to untangle a central conceptual and analytical knot in recent New Zealand histo...
In tracing the interconnections of place and people in James Cowan's writing, this article argues th...
The cultural nationalist narrative, and the myths of origin and invention associated with it, cast a...
New Zealand became a dominion in 1907 and joined the Commonwealth in 1931. These markers of independ...
The paper argues that William Lane's 1892 social-realist novel The Workingman's Paradise is symptoma...
This essay is situated in relation to the critical commonplace that the contrasting literary modes a...
This thesis examines changes in the relationship between romance and realism in the New Zealand shor...
The thesis will be an investigation of the history of the short story in New Zealand, attempting to ...
Dominant theorizations of settler colonialism identify it as a social form characterized by a proble...
Frank Sargeson’s stories and novels often contain violent episodes. These have generally been interp...
<p>This dissertation argues that the literary, intellectual, and cultural borders of Victorian Brita...
This essay provides a critical overview of James Cowan’s writings, his methods, and his publishing h...
This thesis examines the relationship between utopianism and nationalism in New Zealand literature b...
For better or worse, literary modernism has long been associated with cosmopolitanism. Yet modernism...
This essay joins in the discussion about the future of national literatures in the shifting formatio...
This essay attempts to untangle a central conceptual and analytical knot in recent New Zealand histo...
In tracing the interconnections of place and people in James Cowan's writing, this article argues th...