1,449 research outputs found
From medieval English to postcolonial studies
A brief account of the academic transition that I made beginning with my first academic post in Auckland, New Zealand where I was lecturer in Medieval English during the 1970s then moved to Oxford where I completed a D Phil in reformation sermons, then to the University of Otago in Dunedin -- New Zealand again -- where I began teaching New Zealand literature and Postcolonial theory and writing, to my present work in the UK at the University of Northampton, and talking of some of the writers I have met on the way
Encountering the other: multiculturalism in Asian Australian women's fiction
In 2003 Tsen Ling Khoo pointed out that a new generation of Asian-Australians would soon be hailed by a body of diasporic texts that would reflect the experience of living in a white society as a minority group (108). What this experience might consist of as white Australiaâs attitudes toward race relations have shifted from negative stereotyping to reify racial divisions and propagate a masked racism, a move described as âacceptance through difference, inclusion by virtue of othernessâ, is both varied and predictable (Ang, 2001 146). In contemporary fiction written by second and third generation migrants contestations of selfhood, origin and identity experienced by hyphenated Asian-Australians, are represented through recurring narrative tropes: incomplete belonging encourages the multiracial protagonist to other the Asian âotherâ in an attempt to diminish social alienation and difference: but there is also exoticising of such subjects as âotherâ by white Australians; return visits to the original Asian homeland in the hope of redressing the absences and tensions constitutive of migration reinforce the lack of belonging to either place. With reference to novels by authors like Simone Lazaroo, Michelle de Kretser and Alice Pung, read as strategic interventions into identity-based politics, this paper asks how recent Asian-Australian writing maps new cultural coordinates in the national landscape and negotiates interstitial positions between the white Australian present and the Asian heritage
Katherine Mansfield and anima mundi
This presentation proposes a reading of Katherine Mansfieldâs work that will begin with the medieval theories of anima mundi or world soul, the concept of an animistic universe in which the earth can be revivified through a spiritus mundi. It will refer to the French theological scholars of the 12th century who were influential in promoting the Pythagoraean-Platonic doctrine of anima mundi through allegories of âDame Natureâ: Bernard de Sylvestris of Tours (De Universitate Mundi) and Alanus of Insulis (De Planctu Naturae and Anticlaudianus), Jean de Meunâs continuation of Guillaume de Lorrisâs Le Roman de la Rose. This strand of medieval culture and cosmology - often considered as tangential to mainstream European intellectual and Christian religious belief â was popular throughout the Renaissance and has survived in various literary forms in modernist writing, often as a vigorous rebuttal of modernization from an environmental perspective. Although no direct connection with the anima mundi tradition can be traced in Mansfieldâs work, her close identification with nature and the non-human is undeniable, and some familiarity with popular survivals of the tradition of nature personified appear, for example, in her interest in the Greek god, Pan. Her creation of transitive, linking relations between herself and the natural world recalls the close participation between man and the rest of creation characteristic of the medieval world view. Certainly anthropomorphic thinking and the perception of human subjectivity as rooted in non-human nature underpin the sense of wonder and the marvellous found in her representations of the created world and her emphasis on its mystery and splendour. This Arcadian, pastoral orientation also appears in her empathy with living creatures, flowers, plants and trees, while cultivated gardens and wild outdoor spaces are settings for epiphanies, sites of revelation and transformation. Yet, I will argue, Mansfield also introduced her own modernist, gendered critique of the tropes and images associated with nature worship. The talk will refer to the traditions associated with anima mundi in relation to stories like âEpilogue IIâ, âIn the Botanical Gardensâ, âThe Escapeâ, âSee-Sawâ and âPreludeâ, read as modernist adaptations of classical/medieval topoi of the locus amoenus (pleasant place), the hortus conclusus (enclosed garden), and the sacred tree
Veiling and unveiling: Mansfield's modernist aesthetics
The wearing of a veil like other fashionable items of attire in Mansfieldâs fiction â parasols, hats, gloves, muffs, and hair ribbons â usually serves more than mere decoration, protection or fashion. Such accessories often represent symbolically an intangible emotion or feeling, and can be read as a form of disguise. Diaphonous veils that create a filmic layer between viewer and external world, hint at a disturbance in the field of vision and the need for a different mode of seeing. Often this layering signals the necessary artifice of fiction-making and when associated with illusion, deceit and storytelling, points to Mansfieldâs shaping of her art. In stories and sketches like âDie Einsameâ, âThe Dark Hollowâ, âThe Escapeâ and âTaking the Veilâ, she reworks the veil motif as an emblem of self-impersonation, artifice and impersonality. Metaphorically lifting or lowering the veil can be associated with the aesthetic principle of âthe glimpseâ and the authorâs ability to veil and unveil, as in Middleton Murryâs view of her art as offering âthose glimpses of reality that in themselves possess a peculiar vividnessâ, and as stated in her own wish âto lift that mist from my people and let them be seen and then hide them againâ. This paper examines veil imagery in several of Mansfieldâs stories as a significant motif in her modernist aesthetics with which she registers problems of sight and vision in relation to representation
Championing literature throughout the Commonwealth
This article consists of reports from several different editors of Journals from different parts of the Commonwealth, including information on past and current publications, their hosting organisations, editorial boards, funding arrangements, academic profiles and audiences. This is all integrated into a general overview of some of the most eminent current Commonwealth journals
New Zealand Women Traveller Writers : from exile to diaspora
The focus of this article is a group of New Zealand women traveller writers of the first half of the twentieth century who left their country of origin, and in the encounter with new worlds overseas, reconstructed themselves as deterritorialised, diasporic subjects with new understandings of home and belonging. Their work can be read as both transitional and transnational, reflecting the ambivalence of multiple cultural affiliations and reinflecting literary conventions. Such encounters and new points of reference from transiting through foreign lands inevitably catalyse new and unusual forms of diasporic writing, notable for a heightened consciousness of difference (Kalra et al 2008: 30). This article aims to identify patterns of similarity and contrast in their work, and to determine how they incorporate their varied experiences of loss and liberation into artistic reconciliations with the homeland
Mansfield, France and childhood
Mansfieldâs ambivalent love affair with France, which flowered after 1912, also saw her tackling her great theme of childhood as she moved away from the style of the raw, outback New Zealand stories written in 1912/13 into a more impressionistic mode. Her recreation of her early life through the figure of Kezia in the first draft of âThe Aloeâ, written in Paris (March to May 1915), has its origin in stories published in Rhythm (October 1912): âNew Dressesâ, âElenaâ, and âThe Little Girlâ; but interestingly this semi-biographical point of departure is contextualized by stories written around the same time in which childhood is represented as a state that overlaps and is even confused with puberty, adolescence, adulthood, as in âSomething Childish But Very Naturalâ, her first story written in France (Paris, December 1913), and âThe Little Governessâ (Paris, May 1915). This paper examines these transitions in her work to argue that Mansfield explored liminal states in her characters, who combine elements of childhood, youth, and maturity, so dramatising her own psychological criss-crossing between these phases in her recreation of the family drama of âThe Aloe
Slumdog Millionnaire: romancing the slums
The award-winning successes of Danny Boyleâs rags to riches movie, Slumdog Millionaire (2008), a story that oscillates between the discrepant spaces of the Mumbai slums and the showroom of the âWho Wants to be a Millionaire?â quiz, brought an unprecedented level of exposure to urban slum life, and in the eyes of some, imparted a dubious romantic glamour to poverty and degradation. The slum along with the TV showroom, in their diverse intersections (local and global, fundamentalism and metropolitanism; corruption and romance, agency and abjection), figure in the film as sites of multiple oppositions, contradictions and transformations, as metropolitan spaces in which the forces of caste, subalternity, religious fundamentalism and ethnocentrism can be overturned. The paper asks, in light of hostile criticism that the film promotes âpoverty pornographyâ, whether its representations of the oppositional slum and media worlds through the global discourses of cinema point to what Bill Ashcroft calls a âtransformation of modernityâ. It seeks to identify a postcolonial, cosmopolitan ethics, whereby this utopian vision of Bollywood and Western cinemas might be (re)aligned with social, political and economic realitie
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