In Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), Alexis Wright establishes an allegorical mode where she reimagines Europeans' first encounters with Australia from an Aboriginal environmental perspective. In this narrative system, the discovery of Australia is not realised by exploring colonisers, but by vulnerable strangers who apprehend the continent both experientially and linguistically. In Carpentaria, the Stranger-figure of Elias Smith is left amnesic after surviving a shipwreck during a cyclone; his first encounter with Australia is extremely violent and results in a loss of personal (hi)story. In The Swan Book, the character of Bella Donna seeks refuge in the nostalgia of swan stories after the disappearance of her native lands due t...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
This article examines how Aboriginal conceptions of time and space in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria an...
From the 1960s onwards, intellectual movements of contestation have interrogated the concept of "the...
In Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), Alexis Wright establishes an allegorical mode where ...
Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria (2006) is a highly significant event in Australian Literature, winning t...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
In the 1990s the advent of theories of embodied cognition have rendered porous the boundaries betwee...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
Following the 1992 Mabo Decision which overturned the historical myth of terra nullius and its decla...
Literary criticism, particularly ecocriticism, occupies an uneasy position with regard to activism: ...
The Swan Book (pub. 2013) by the Indigenous-Australian author Alexis Wright is an eco-dystopian epic...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
This article considers Alexis Wright’s 2006 novel Carpentaria in relation to climate change and temp...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
This article examines how Aboriginal conceptions of time and space in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria an...
From the 1960s onwards, intellectual movements of contestation have interrogated the concept of "the...
In Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), Alexis Wright establishes an allegorical mode where ...
Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria (2006) is a highly significant event in Australian Literature, winning t...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
In the 1990s the advent of theories of embodied cognition have rendered porous the boundaries betwee...
The knowledge of one's surroundings is not fixed in time, but rather consists in a constantly evolvi...
Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013), set one hundred years in the future on a climate-change...
Following the 1992 Mabo Decision which overturned the historical myth of terra nullius and its decla...
Literary criticism, particularly ecocriticism, occupies an uneasy position with regard to activism: ...
The Swan Book (pub. 2013) by the Indigenous-Australian author Alexis Wright is an eco-dystopian epic...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
This article analyses the representation of environmental crisis and climate crisis in Carpentaria (...
This article considers Alexis Wright’s 2006 novel Carpentaria in relation to climate change and temp...
The thesis offers a close reading of the figure of the swan in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book, a mult...
This article examines how Aboriginal conceptions of time and space in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria an...
From the 1960s onwards, intellectual movements of contestation have interrogated the concept of "the...