Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 “Painting the Woods into Existence” : Australian Fiction on the Value of the Arts
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'This article analyses two works of contemporary Australian fiction—Wayne Macauley’s Caravan Story and Julie Koh’s “Inquiry Regarding the Recent Goings-On in the Woods”—and places their depictions of artists under attack in the context of Australian cultural policy history. Despite the surreal hyperviolence contained in these stories, their concerns neatly align with the academic criticisms of cultural policy in their respective eras. Caravan Story, published at the end of the John Howard era, shows how a focus on economic return in lieu of artistic merit can erode the value artists place on themselves and their work. “Inquiry”, published soon after Minister for the Arts George Brandis had significantly reduced available arts funding, represents the drastic effect the funding cuts had on artists and the passionate community response. The texts are further connected by their optimistic endings, contextualised here through an exploration of the artists’ biographies and their struggles to push back against cultural demands of economic success. This article shows how these experimental works of fiction make the case for the intrinsic value of the arts through narratives that reject the economic imperative and in their very constitution as creative works.'(Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Journal of Australian Studies vol. 48 no. 4 2024 29394290 2024 periodical issue

    'It’s been a pleasure to work as the interim editors for the Journal of Australian Studies in 2024. As executive members of the International Association of Australian Studies (InASA), we have been fortunate to read such a diverse and innovative collection of submissions. JAS publishes articles from across the full spectrum of humanities fields that critically engage with all aspects of Australia—past, present and future. It is the premier Australian studies journal and has been in print since the 1970s. JAS is integral to InASA’s mission to provide a voice for Australian studies across the world and to bring together Australianists from varied disciplinary backgrounds. The future of Australian studies is bright, diverse and global, and it has a deep history.' (Editorial Introduction)

    2024
    pg. 515-530
Last amended 6 Jan 2025 08:15:30
515-530 “Painting the Woods into Existence” : Australian Fiction on the Value of the Artssmall AustLit logo Journal of Australian Studies
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