y separately published work icon Southerly periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Alternative title: CanonOZities : the making of literary reputations in Australia
Issue Details: First known date: 1997... vol. 57 no. 3 Spring 1997 of Southerly est. 1939 Southerly
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 1997 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Introduction (to: CanonOZities : The Making of Litary Reputations inAustralia), Robert Dixon , single work criticism (p. 5-15)
Literary Canons and Literary Institutions, David Carter , single work criticism (p. 16-37)
Canonical Readings: Australian Literature and the Universities, Leigh Dale , single work criticism (p. 38-50)
Canon Around the Hub: Angus and Robertson and the Post-War Literary Canon, Neil James , Elizabeth Webby , single work criticism (p. 51-66)
Disjunctions: Australian Literature and the Secondary English Curriculum, Brenton Doecke , single work criticism (p. 67-77)
Fired from the Canon: The Sacking of Australian Working Class Literature, Ian Syson , single work criticism (p. 78-89)
Literary Allsorts : 'The Australian Book Review' 1978-1996, Michael Sharkey , single work criticism (p. 90-103)
Government Patronage and Literary Reputations, Susan Lever , single work criticism (p. 104-114)
Women Writers, Gendered Readings, Literary Politic, Delys Bird , single work criticism (p. 115-124)
Who's in Whose Canon? : Transforming Aboriginal Writers into Big Guns, Ruby Langford Ginibi , Penny Van Toorn , single work criticism (p. 125-136)
Canonical Dispositions: Books About How to Read Books, Patrick Buckridge , single work criticism (p. 137-151)
Fighting Them on the Beaches: The University Versus the People in the Case of Henry Lawson, Christopher Lee , single work criticism (p. 152-161)
Australian or Not? : The Acceptance of an Expatriate and the Reputation of Henry Handel Richardson, Catherine Cecilia Pratt , single work criticism (p. 162-170)
Bruce Dawe, the Ordinary and Extraordinary Bloke, Dennis Haskell , single work criticism (p. 171-181)
Thea Astley-'Completely Neutered' : Gender, Reception and Reputation, Debra Adelaide , single work criticism (p. 182-190)
Theatre and Cultural Commerce: Louis Nowra's "Cosi", Helen Gilbert , single work criticism (p. 191-199)
Is the Book of the Life a Good Book? : Autobiography in Patrick White, Dorothy Hewett and Beverley Farmer, David English , single work criticism (p. 200-210)
The Story Behind the Facts, Carmel Bird , single work biography (p. 211-212)
Quiet Canonisation, Alex Buzo , single work criticism biography (p. 212-213)
Remoteness and Reputation, Bruce Dawe , single work criticism biography (p. 214-215)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

‘A Heart That Could be Strong and True’ : Kenneth Cook’s Wake in Fright as Queer Interior Monique Rooney , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , Special Issue vol. 11 no. 1 2011; (p. 1-15)
'In ' "A heart that could be strong and true": Kenneth Cook's Wake in Fright as queer interior' Monique Rooney presents a compelling reading of the complicated relations between self and other, interior and exterior, in the iconic, troubling text of Wake in Fright. Her discussion focuses on the play of aurality and lyricism in the novel's account of outsider relations, and proposes a reading that draws on Michael Snediker's 'emphasis on a potentially joyful Freud' in classic accounts of queer melancholy in order to attend to what she determines is a 'critique of processes of masculinist dis-identification' in the novel. This important discussion works to reanimate critical consideration not only of a significant and neglected text, but also of broader debates around the reach and nature of metropolitan subjectivities in post- WWII literature in Australia.' (Source: Introduction : Archive Madness, p. 3)
‘A Heart That Could be Strong and True’ : Kenneth Cook’s Wake in Fright as Queer Interior Monique Rooney , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , Special Issue vol. 11 no. 1 2011; (p. 1-15)
'In ' "A heart that could be strong and true": Kenneth Cook's Wake in Fright as queer interior' Monique Rooney presents a compelling reading of the complicated relations between self and other, interior and exterior, in the iconic, troubling text of Wake in Fright. Her discussion focuses on the play of aurality and lyricism in the novel's account of outsider relations, and proposes a reading that draws on Michael Snediker's 'emphasis on a potentially joyful Freud' in classic accounts of queer melancholy in order to attend to what she determines is a 'critique of processes of masculinist dis-identification' in the novel. This important discussion works to reanimate critical consideration not only of a significant and neglected text, but also of broader debates around the reach and nature of metropolitan subjectivities in post- WWII literature in Australia.' (Source: Introduction : Archive Madness, p. 3)
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