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An ambivalent ground: re-placing Australian literaturePaull, James, School of English, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
Narratives of place have always been crucial to the construction of Australian identity. The obsession with identity in Australia betrays longstanding uncertainty. It is not difficult to interpret in this uncertainty a replaying of the deeper insecurities surrounding the settler community's legal and more broadly cultural claims to the land. Such insecurities are typically understood negatively. In contrast, this thesis accepts the uncertainty of identity as an activating principle, appropriate to any interpretation of the narratives and themes that inform what it means to be Australian. Fundamental to this uncertainty is a provisionality in the post-colonial experience of place that is papered over by misleadingly coherent spatial narratives that stem from the imperial inheritance of Australian mythology. Place is a model for the tension between the coherence of mythic narratives and the actual rhizomic formlessness of daily life. Place is the ???ground??? of that life, but an ambivalent ground. An Ambivalent Ground approaches postcolonial Australia as a densely woven text. In this text, stories that describe the founding of a nation are enveloped by other stories, not so well known, that work to transform those more familiar narratives. ???Re-placing Australian literature??? describes the process of this transformation. It signifies an interpretative practice which seeks to recuperate the open-ended experience of place that remains disguised by the coherent narratives of nationhood. The process of ???re-placing??? Australian literature shifts the understanding of nation towards a landscape that speaks not so much about identity as about the constitutive performances of everyday life. It also converges with the unhomely dimension that is the colonist's ambiguous sense of belonging. We can understand this process with an analogy used in this thesis, that of music ??? the colonising language, and noise ??? the ostensibly inchoate, unformed background disruptive to cultural order yet revealing the spatial realities of place. Traditionally, cultural narratives in Australia have disguised the much more complex way in which place noisily disrupts and diffracts those narratives, and in the process generates the ambivalence of Australian identity. Rather than a text or a narrative, place is a plenitude, a densely intertwined performance space, a performance that constantly renders experience ??? and its cultural function ??? transgressive. The purpose of this thesis is not to displace stereotypical narratives of nationhood with yet another narrative. Rather, it offers the more risky proposition that provisionality and uncertainty are constitutive features of Australian social being. The narrative in the thesis represents an aggregation of such an ambivalent ground, addressing the persistent tension between place and the larger drama of colonialist history and discourse.
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Fictocritical sentences / Simon Robb.Robb, Simon January 2001 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 166-168). / 168 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. + 2 sound discs (CD) / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Primarily enacts a fictocritical mapping of local cultural events essentially concerned with crime and trauma in Adelaide. The fictocritical treatment of these events simulates their unresolved or traumatised condition. A secondary concern is the relationship between electronic writing (hypertext) and fictocriticism. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of English, 2001
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The tsa-chu of the Ch‘ing period黃曾影靖, Wong, Nancy. January 1970 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Master / Master of Arts
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The emergence of American nature writing, 1860-1909: John Burroughs, Henry David Thoreau, and Houghton, Mifflin and CompanyLupfer, Eric Christopher 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Ontological Torah: an instrument of religious and social discourseRevelson, Harold Glenn 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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THE GROTESQUE IN EARLY AMERICAN NATURALISMFischler, Lee Lawrence January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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道家詩學Cheng, Chun-wai, 鄭振偉 January 1998 (has links)
Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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A contemporary psychological approach to analyzing Liu Xie's theory of writing in Wen-Xin Diao-LongLai, Sing-chi, 黎承志 January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
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René Marqués y la realidad puertorriqueñaPadilla-Detrés, José, 1936- January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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Elements of folklore in three periods of Gauchesque literatureCarlisle, Charles R. January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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