Jasmine Davies Jasmine Davies i(A140946 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Exegesis : An Examination of Australian Gothic Crime Fiction and the Novella 'The Candidate' Jasmine Davies , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Candidate : A Novella and Examination of Australian Gothic Crime Fiction 2010; (p. 109-146)
'A critical study of a selection of Australian literary works that exhibit the characteristics of both Gothic and crime genres. Through an analysis of these creative works, this study argues that the interlacing of Gothic traditions with crime writing conventions has been a noteworthy practice in Australian fiction during both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and these literary tropes are interwoven in the writing of 'The Candidate', a Gothic crime novella.'
Source: Author's abstract
1 1 The Candidate Jasmine Davies , 2010 single work novella crime
— Appears in: The Candidate : A Novella and Examination of Australian Gothic Crime Fiction 2010; (p. 1-108)
'A contemporary literary experiment in a Gothic crime ‘hybrid’ style.'
1 y separately published work icon The Candidate : A Novella and Examination of Australian Gothic Crime Fiction Jasmine Davies , Kelvin Grove : 2010 Z1791655 2010 single work thesis 'Australia is a land without haunted castles or subterranean corridors, without ancient graveyards or decaying monasteries, a land whose climate is rarely gloomy. Yet, the literary landscape is splattered with shades of the Gothic genre. This Gothic heritage is especially evident within elements of nineteenth century Australian sensation fiction. Australian crime fiction in the twentieth century, in keeping with this lineage, repeatedly employs elements of the Gothic, adapting and appropriating these conventions for literary effect. I believe that a 'mélange' of historical Gothic crime traditions could produce an exciting new mode of Gothic crime writing in the Australian context. As such, I have written a contemporary literary experiment in a Gothic crime 'hybrid' style: this novella forms my creative practice. The accompanying exegesis is a critical study of a selection of Australian literary works that exhibit the characteristics of both Gothic and crime genres. Through an analysis of these creative works, this study argues that the interlacing of Gothic traditions with crime writing conventions has been a noteworthy practice in Australian fiction during both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and these literary tropes are interwoven in the writing of 'The Candidate', a Gothic crime novella.'
Source: Author's abstract
1 A Face in the Crowd Jasmine Davies , 2004 single work short story
— Appears in: A Most Provoking Thing 2004; (p. 173-177)
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