y separately published work icon Life Writing periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2017... vol. 14 no. 3 2017 of Life Writing est. 2004 Life Writing
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2017 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Joe Sacco’s Australian Story, Gillian Whitlock , single work criticism

'Although Joe Sacco is frequently present in the frame of his comics journalism, as a witness, listener and scribe, he rarely attaches his own autobiographical experience to these representations of self. Recently some more detailed biographical detail about Joe Sacco’s own life story has begun to emerge in the frames of his comics, particularly in his work on refugees and asylum seekers. One of the least significant and little known facts about Joe Sacco’s life, his childhood as a migrant in Australia, becomes relevant here, extending his enduring commitment to ethical spectatorship, and the visibility of human rights violations, by engaging with this most difficult and intimate work of interrogating citizenship, our own and ‘others’.'  (Publication abstract)

(p. 283-295)
Remembering Violence in Alice Pung’s Her Father’s Daughter : The Postmemoir and Diasporisation, Anne Brewster , single work criticism

'Alice Pung’s postmemoir of the after-effects of political violence maps a discursive trajectory from (1) her father’s survivor memory of the Cambodian genocide, to (2) her own postmemory as a second-generation Asian-Australian, to (3) the latter’s remediation as social memory within the Australian (trans)national imaginary. Hirsch describes the family as ‘the privileged site of the memorial transmission’ of trauma. In Her Father’s Daughter, Pung parallels the heroic narrative of her father’s survival of ‘a real and bloody social revolution’ (HFD, 48) with the more modest narrative of her own embodied travails with ‘authentic feeling’ (21) regarding her affective connectivity with her extended family and the cultural and geographical landscapes they inhabited. Her postmemorial journey is one into her own heart, variously described as ‘a deformed dumpling’ (28) and ‘rotting fruit’ (32). Literary texts such as Pung’s can bring about the timely reanimation of the post-settler state’s archives through investing them with familial forms of mediation and aesthetic expression. In Her Father’s Daughter, disaporic subjectivity is articulated through the mapping of transnational and transgenerational histories.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 313-325)
I Guess What You Say Is True, Oliver Driscoll , single work autobiography

'This work of non-fiction struggles with the technical and ethical difficulties of representing the former Yugoslavia, an area that has experienced deep trauma and that is at a remove from the author’s experience. The author-narrator confronts the challenges of representing others’ trauma in an oblique way: focusing on his own life in Melbourne and his responses to Yugoslavia’s past; critiquing narrative forms and particular literary works that represent the trauma, namely those of the Bosnian-American writers Aleksandar Hemon and Semezdin Mehmedinović; and acknowledging the vexed framework of the creative-writing PhD for which the reflection was produced.'  (Publication abstract)

(p. 387-400)
[Review Essay] Navigating Loss in Women’s Contemporary Memoir, Katrin Den Elzen , single work essay

'The widely acknowledged memoir boom has thrown the limelight on this contested genre. While memoir has received significant critical attention in recent times, it is striking that the sub-genre of the grief memoir has seen little scholarly investigation until now. But then the grief memoir, in particular women’s grief memoirs, itself is a ‘relatively new literary form’, as Kathleen Fowler has argued (525).' (Introduction)

(p. 409-412)
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