Colonial fiction
Fiction of the Bulletin Era
Modern and Postmodern Fiction
Sources of Lawson’s Stories
Bush as a Physical Entity in Lawson’s Stories (“In a Dry Season”, “In a Wet Season”, “Hungerford”, “Water Them Geraniums”)
Bush: a tutor of eccentric minds (“The Bush Undertaker”, “Crime in the Bush”)
Mateship in Lawson’s Stories (“That There Dog of Mine”)
The Australian Bushman
The Australian Bushwoman (“The Drover’s Wife”, “Water Them Geraniums”)
Marriage in the Bush (“Joe Wilson’s Courtship”, “Drifting Apart”, “A Double Buggy at Lahey’s Creek”)
Lawson’s Realism
Lawson’s Humour
Death in the Bush: “The Union Buries Its Dead”
“The Drover’s Wife” and Its Parodies
The Language of Lawson’s Stories
Voss: interpretations (psychological, metaphysical, religious)
Voss: a love story
Voss: characters
Voss: social criticism
Voss: a reinterpretation of the traditional Australian myth
The Character of Voss
White’s Modernism
Patrick White: a writer with a vision
Lawson and White: the treatment of landscape
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: an attack on domesticity
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: breaking the realist mirror
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: reality vs. fiction
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: characters
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: themes
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: structure
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: genres
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: rewriting patriarchal myths
Miss Peabody’s Inheritance: a tale of two countries
Elements of Humour in Miss Peabody’s Inheritance
Jolley’s Postmodernism (with a female difference)
The Character of Miss Peabody
The Character of Miss Thorne
No comments:
Post a Comment