Writing in Hope and Fear
Literature as Politics in Postwar Australia
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:1st Jan '96
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- Hardback£47.50(9780521561464)
A compelling critical and historical account of politics in postwar Australian literary culture.
Literary debate in postwar Australia was marked by the division between radical nationalists and cultural conservatives. The author traces this conflict through a range of journals, their editors, and individual writers, offering a compelling critical and historical account of Australian literary culture.For most of the postwar period, Australian literary debate was marked by the division between radical nationalists on the Left and cultural conservatives on the Right. John McLaren's broad cultural history traces the origins of these conflicts, discusses key literary works and major journals, and focuses on the individuals involved in various sagas and struggles. McLaren shows that writing became a form of politics itself, expressing either hope or fear about the revolution that was perceived to be imminent, as well as reflecting society more broadly. The work of politically committed writers is closely examined, as is the response to ostensibly unpolitical writers. McLaren also considers the new journalism and the work of younger poets. He shows that it was not until the changes brought by the 1960s and the Whitlam government that literature was truly freed from these constraints.
ISBN: 9780521567565
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
Weight: 380g
256 pages