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The Mabo Turn in Australian Fiction
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The Mabo Turn in Australian Fiction

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Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 1787072649
ISBN-13 9781787072640
Edition New
Publisher Peter Lang Ltd
Imprint Peter Lang Ltd
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Dec 26th, 2017
Print length 268 Pages
Weight 510 grams
Dimensions 15.70 x 23.00 x 2.20 cms
Ksh 13,250.00
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The Mabo court decision – which acknowledged indigenous people’s presence in the land, in history, and in public affairs in Australia – challenged previous ways of thinking about Australian history and culture. This is the first study of the impact of this decision on Australian fiction, focusing on nineteen important contemporary novels.

Winner of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature‘s Alvie Egan Award 2019!

Winner of the Association for Anglophone Postcolonial Studies (GAPS) Dissertation Award 2018

This is the first in-depth, broad-based study of the impact of the Australian High Court’s landmark Mabo decision of 1992 on Australian fiction. More than any other event in Australia’s legal, political and cultural history, the Mabo judgement – which recognised indigenous Australians’ customary «native title» to land – challenged previous ways of thinking about land and space, settlement and belonging, race and relationships, and nation and history, both historically and contemporaneously. While Mabo’s impact on history, law, politics and film has been the focus of scholarly attention, the study of its influence on literature has been sporadic and largely limited to examinations of non-Aboriginal novels.

Now, a quarter of a century after Mabo, this book takes a closer look at nineteen contemporary novels – including works by David Malouf, Alex Miller, Kate Grenville, Thea Astley, Tim Winton, Michelle de Kretser, Richard Flanagan, Alexis Wright and Kim Scott – in order to define and describe Australia’s literary imaginary as it reflects and articulates post-Mabo discourse today. Indeed, literature’s substantial engagement with Mabo’s cultural legacy – the acknowledgement of indigenous people’s presence in the land, in history, and in public affairs, as opposed to their absence – demands a re-writing of literary history to account for a “Mabo turn” in Australian fiction.


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