y separately published work icon Life Writing periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... vol. 19 no. 2 2021 of Life Writing est. 2004 Life Writing
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This edition of Life Writing showcases a cluster of four papers that were first presented at the 2019 International Auto/Biography Association (IABA) conference in Madrid. The conference theme was ‘Knowing the Self: Auto/Biographical Narratives and the History of Knowledge’, and in a panel session entitled ‘Dear Diary, Dear Body’, Babs Boter, Ernestine Hoegen, Meritxell Simon-Martin, and Leonieke Vermeer presented the research that appears here in a cluster using the same title. Following this cluster, we present two further articles on aspects of diary writing before completing the issue independent of the theme of diaries.' (Publication editorial)

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2021 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
From Landscape to Country : Writing Settler Belonging in Post-Mabo Australia, Martina Horáková , single work criticism

'One of the debates which Australia continues to witness with various degrees of intensity involves the complex ways of articulating settler (un)belonging in the postcolonising settler nation. While one of the most significant moments which re-defined settler-Indigenous relationship took place around the turn of the twenty-first century, the critical scholarship examining settler anxieties regarding the sense of (un)belonging is flourishing in the post-Mabo period, as is the production of cultural and literary narratives engaging with this topic. This article explores two recent memoirs of settler belonging in Australia and contextualises them in a broader tradition of settler memoirs in the first decade of this century. By comparing and contrasting Tim Winton’s Island Home (2015. London: Picador) and Kim Mahood’s Position Doubtful (2016. Melbourne: Scribe), the article demonstrates a visible shift from earlier forms of writing settler (un)belonging, which often thematised settler anxiety and desire to belong through various acts of appropriating Indigenous ways of belonging. Winton’s and Mahood’s memoirs, however, offer a different vision of settler belonging: one that is deeply embedded in local, bioregional and environmental histories, recognition of Indigenous knowledges as significant agents shaping post-Mabo aesthetics and politics, and a commitment to transformation of settler relationship with the land from territory to Country.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 295-314)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 6 Apr 2022 11:56:30
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