The Wide Brown Land on the Silver Screen single work   criticism  
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 The Wide Brown Land on the Silver Screen
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

Analyses representations of land and nature in Australian cinema and television, with a focus on the significant changes from the 1980s in the kind of landscape and nature which most fully signify the nation and in their complex, politically volatile engagements with Aboriginality.

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    y separately published work icon Always Almost Modern : Australian Print Cultures and Modernity David Carter , Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2013 6479433 2013 multi chapter work criticism

    'Was Australian culture born modern or has it always been behind the game, never quite modern enough? Was it always already or only always almost modern? David Carter’s essays examine the complex engagements of Australian writers, artists, editors and consumers with 20th-century modernity, social and political crisis, and the impact of modernisms. Always Almost Modern ranges from the great mid-century novels of authors such as Eleanor Dark and M. Barnard Eldershaw to the unprecedented bestseller that was They’re a Weird Mob, from famous to largely forgotten local magazines and to film and television, and from the avant-garde to nationalism, communism and the middlebrow. Chapters engage with key themes in contemporary literary and cultural studies, exploring new ways of understanding Australian culture in terms of its modernity and transnationalism.' (Publisher's blurb)

    Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2013
    pg. 232-252
Last amended 10 Jun 2015 14:18:01
232-252 The Wide Brown Land on the Silver Screensmall AustLit logo
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