Australian landscape - Literary portrayal
Articles
- What Created, What Perceived?: Early Responses to New South Wales
How, then, should we view the recent historiography of our imaginative evolution—as we have to date, as a valid description of what has occurred Or,…
1 October 1975 - Some Major Themes in the Novels of Katharine Susannah Prichard
A passionate love of the land and of the people who live close to the soil is the source of Katharine Susannah Prichard's writing. Like…
1 June 1963 - Henry Kingsley and the Australian Landscape
Filed in the manuscripts section of the Mitchell Library are nine very interesting watercolour paintings by Henry Kingsley. They were referred to briefly by Brian…
1 October 1970 - The Composition of Geoffry Hamlyn: A Comment
Brian Elliott's article, 'The Composition of Geoffry Hamlyn: The Legend and the Facts', (Australian Literary Studies, vol. 3, no. 3, May 1968) has…
1 May 1969 - Havelock Ellis’s Australian Idyll
WHEN you consider how much Australiana is now available which only a few years ago was virtually inaccessible, it is a little surprising that no…
1 June 1967 - Henry Kingsley in Australia
Mellick provides some details of Henry Kingsley's time in Australia.
1 May 1973 - A Politics of the Dreamtime: Destructive and Regenerative Rainbows in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria
Focusing on Wright’s representation of the land, the river and the cyclone, the essay attempts to demonstrate ‘how playfully, flexibly and experimentally Wright moblilises a…
1 November 2008 - Salt Scars: John Kinsella’s Wheatbelt
Discusses John Kinsella's long-term poetic engagement with the fraught landscape of the West Australian Wheatbelt. 'Kinsella is an awkward manic wheatbelt laureate, filled with passionate…
1 June 2012 - ‘What Would Civilisation Be without a Gun?’ The Resistant Land in Sarah Campion’s Burdekin Trilogy
Elizabeth Lawson's 'biographical-critical survey' published in ALS in 2004 was the most recent of several efforts to win for Sarah Campion's novels the attention that…
1 October 2006 - Bushed
The discovery of the antipodean environment and its landscapes posed a challenge and set a limit to European notions of culture and nature which continue…
1 October 1993 - Terra Australis: Landscape as Medium in Capricornia and Poor Fellow My Country
Since the finding of the Australian High Court in what has come to be known as the Mabo decision of January 1992, the phrase Terra…
1 May 1995 - Dying of Landscape: E.L. Grant Watson and the Australian Desert
The six, relatively neglected Australian novels of Elliot Lovegood Grant Watson, written between 1914 and 1935, present an intriguing and complex reworking of their author's…
1 May 1999 - Is There No End to Travelling? Paul Carter in the Linguistic No-Man’s-Land
Discusses Carter’s and other recent critical approaches to exploration narratives.
1 May 1995 - Exploring Aesthetics: The Picturesque Appropriation of Land in Journals of Australian Exploration
The journals of explorers are an important element in the cultural representation of the geography of Australia and of the nature of its inhabitants. But…
1 October 1992 - Judith Wright’s Delicate Balance
Judith Wright's poetry, stretching as it now does over thirty years and a dozen volumes, can be seen as a complex, evolving series of exhaustive…
1 October 1980 - Littoral Erosion: The Changing Shoreline of Australian Culture
A good academic paper, like a river, is a fluent intertwining, an intermingling and winding together of strands of material from different sources which all…
1 May 1996 - Old Orders, New Lands: The Earth Spirit in Picnic at Hanging Rock
Joan Lindsay's Picnic at Hanging Rock gives voice to a powerful theme which George Steiner has claimed is characteristic of Russian and American fiction—that is…
1 May 1978 - Review of Tasmanian Visions: Landscapes in Writing, Art and Photography, by Roslynn D. Haynes
In the last quarter of the twentieth century, the margin became the centre of attention. The shift to late capitalism ascribed new value to the…
1 October 2010 - ‘Contour-Line by Contour’: Landscape Change as an Index of History in the Poetry of Les Murray
Within the sequence of The Idyll Wheel (1989) Les Murray brought to a close the mythic journey of 'home-coming', which had sustained much of his…
1 May 1994 - Henry Kingsley, and the ‘Dear Old Station’: The ‘Baroona’ of Geoffry Hamlyn?
Where did Henry Kingsley work or get acquainted with cattle while he was in Australia? The question arises from a close look at one of…
1 October 1993
Contributors
- Hugh Anderson
- Rosilyn Baxter
- Bruce A. Clunies Ross
- Frances Devlin-Glass
- David Dowling
- Alan Frost
- John Heuzenroeder
- Tony Hughes-d'Aeth
- Roslynn D. Haynes
- Lars Jensen
- Joan Kirkby
- Martin Leer
- Ellen Malos
- J. S. D. Mellick
- J. S. D. Mellick
- Fiona Polack
- Simon Ryan
- Cheryl Taylor
- Andrew Taylor
- Lydia Wevers