Shapely experience and the limits of 'late colonial transcendentalism': the portrait of the artist as soldier in Roger McDonald’s '1915'
Article
Article Title | Shapely experience and the limits of 'late colonial transcendentalism': the portrait of the artist as soldier in Roger McDonald’s '1915' |
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ERA Journal ID | 11577 |
Article Category | Article |
Authors | |
Author | Lee, Christopher |
Journal Title | Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature |
Journal Citation | 11 (2), pp. 1-8 |
Number of Pages | 8 |
Year | 2011 |
Place of Publication | Canberra, Australia |
ISSN | 1447-8986 |
1833-6027 | |
Web Address (URL) | http://www.nla.gov.au/openpublish/index.php/jasal/article/view/1828/2766 |
Abstract | This essay argues that Roger McDonald’s debut novel 1915 represents a form of literary modernism which rejects the easy aesthetic comforts of ‘late colonial transcendentalism’ (17). McDonald presents an intricate -- we might even say ritualised -- pattern of subversive counterpoint to ‘reveal and dramatise the failure of the subject to escape its own limits, and hence its own history’ (McCann 155). The result is a highly self-conscious literary novel that seeks to reconcile the art of high modernism with a postcolonial practice interested in the consequences of public memory. |
Keywords | modernism, post-colonialism, Roger McDonald, Australian literature, war, public memory, gender, the novel, literary history |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 470507. Comparative and transnational literature |
470530. Stylistics and textual analysis | |
470502. Australian literature (excl. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander literature) | |
Byline Affiliations | School of Humanities and Communication |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q1353/shapely-experience-and-the-limits-of-late-colonial-transcendentalism-the-portrait-of-the-artist-as-soldier-in-roger-mcdonald-s-1915
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