Elizabeth Leane Elizabeth Leane i(A96414 works by) (a.k.a. Elle Leane)
Gender: Female
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1 Where Borders Break Down : Recollections of a Polar Traveller Elizabeth Leane , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Griffith Review , no. 77 2022; (p. 40-50)

'WHEN EXPLAINING MY Antarctic research to new acquaintances, at a dinner party or a barbeque, I can usually predict the direction of the conversation. First comes surprise and – depending on the crowd – perhaps delight that someone working in the humanities conducts research on the Antarctic region. Then almost always the question follows of whether I have ever visited the remote place that occupies so much of my intellectual life. I understand the impulse behind this question: part polite curiosity, but also genuine intrigue about a part of the world that, even now, comparatively few people have had the chance to experience. It’s a question I would ask, were our positions reversed. But it also raises a whole series of uncomfortable issues.' (Introduction)

1 Tasmania from Below : Antarctic Travellers’ Accounts of a Southern 'Gateway' Elizabeth Leane , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Studies in Travel Writing , vol. 20 no. 1 2016; (p. 34-48)

'Tasmania is often represented in travel accounts as a remote place at the edge of the world. For Antarctic travellers, however, Tasmania is not only an end but also a means: a way-station rather than a destination, a point from which to commence the last leg of an expedition or a haven to return to at its conclusion, and sometimes a place to recuperate between multiple visits. This article examines representations of Tasmania – and particularly its capital city and main port, Hobart – produced by explorers and other travellers on their way to (or from) more southerly destinations. Antarctic travel texts compare and contrast Tasmania to higher latitudes, contextualising it not just as a far southern margin of the familiar world, but also as a northern limit of a lesser-known region of the globe. Both Antarctic travellers’ journeys and their narratives produce a connectedness between Tasmania and other circumpolar places, which in turn embeds the island within a new geographical imaginary: a southern rim surrounding a polar centre. These travel narratives reinforce the image of Hobart as a “gateway” but also put pressure on this term, suggesting a relationship with the far south that includes but goes beyond that of an exit or entry point.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 'A Place of Ideals in Conflict' : Images of Antarctica in Australian Literature Elizabeth Leane , 2007 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Littoral Zone : Australian Contexts and Their Writers 2007; (p. 261-290)
This chapter examines Australian literature (poetry, fiction, and plays) dealing with Antarctica, focussing on each text's engagement with the Antarctic environment and the debates surrounding it. Beginning with two late nineteenth-century Antarctic utopias, the survey moves through the work of well-known writers such as Douglas Stewart and Thomas Keneally in the mid-century to more recent writing by Dorothy Porter, Les Murray, Caroline Caddy, and others. Less familiar material, such as poetry by Antarctic expeditioners themselves, is also discussed. The essay traces a rough progression in Australian representation of the far southern environment, from an initial utopian approach to an emphasis on its stark, 'timeless' icescape as a minimalist backdrop for human dramas to an appreciation of its changeability, complexity and fragility. (from The Littoral Zone)
1 Polar Disciplines Elizabeth Leane , 2006 single work essay
— Appears in: Island , Winter no. 105 2006; (p. 10-18)
Elizabeth Leane reflects on her Australian Antarctic Division-sponsored journey in 2004. Leane experienced doubts about the validity of her humanities-based research compared with the work being done by the scientific community in the Antarctic. This essay reflects on those misgivings.
1 Polar Newspapers as Colonising Fictions : The Frontier Journalism of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition Elizabeth Leane , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Literatures Review , October no. 42 2004; (p. 25-43)
Elizabeth Leane argues that polar newspapers function as a colonising device, 'imaginatively transforming the tiny, isolated, and provisional expedition community into an established colony' (27). Leane's analysis focuses on the 'Adelie Blizzard,' the unpublished newspaper of Douglas Mawson's Australasian Antartic Expedition of 1911-1914.
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