Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Fish-out-of-Water : Mainstreaming Settler-Colonial Myths of Origin in Matthew Condon’s The Trout Opera
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'Since the 1980s, Australian critical and creative writers have employed family history as an adaptive metaphor for challenging hegemonic representations of national descent. Literary and cultural critics, in particular, describe a strong connection between complex literary representations of family in self-reflective and generically hybrid novels and an increasingly inclusive national cultural imaginary. In this article, I investigate how genealogy functions as a trope for reimagining dominant models of cultural representation in Matthew Condon’s The Trout Opera (2007). Condon’s novel exhibits both a degree of self-reflexivity and generic hybridity. However, it provides a counterpoint to what critics have described as the productive potential of filial allegories of nation. In both theme and structure, Condon’s novel dramatises a transition to a multicultural order that reproduces the cultural authority of the white patriarchal order it replaces. Genealogy, in this instance, serves as a quasi-biological metanarrative to naturalise the assimilation of multiple cultural identities and experiences in a settler colonial myth of origin. I employ Edward Said’s (1983) model of filiation and affiliation to examine the thematic and generic affiliations underpinning this dialectical manoeuvre and to illuminate how the discursive effects of genealogy are mediated by the author’s subject position and the genre(s) they employ.' (Publication abstract)

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    y separately published work icon JASAL Conference Issue : Reading and Writing Australian Literature vol. 21 no. 2 2021 22894191 2021 periodical issue 'This issue of JASAL publishes essays first presented at ASAL2020 Virtual, an online conference that replaced a conference at James Cook University, Cairns, after COVID-19 restrictions necessitated a reimagination of the face-to-face program. At the time of writing this introduction, twelve months after ASAL2020, many of those who attended the conference are again in lockdown as new strains of COVID-19 test the capacities of health and civic authorities, and the patience of a population seeking to comprehend this ‘new normal.’ Many of those who attended ASAL2020 also logged on again in July 2021 to join the Australian Literary Studies Convention, hosted by Victoria University, confirming the value of virtual communion to the development of the work we do as literary scholars and the spirit in which we do that work.' (Roger Osborne : Reading and Writing Australian Literature: Introduction 2021
Last amended 2 Sep 2021 13:16:55
https://openjournals.library.usyd.edu.au/index.php/JASAL/article/view/14892 Fish-out-of-Water : Mainstreaming Settler-Colonial Myths of Origin in Matthew Condon’s The Trout Operasmall AustLit logo JASAL
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