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1: Kim Scott’s Publishing History in Three Contexts: Australian Aboriginal, National, and International
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Per Henningsgaard
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Note on Orthography xi
- Chronology of Key Writings xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1: Kim Scott’s Publishing History in Three Contexts: Australian Aboriginal, National, and International 9
- 2: Kim Scott’s True Country as Aboriginal Bildungsroman 25
- 3: The Land Holds All Things: Kim Scott’s Benang— A Guide to Postcolonial Spatiality 37
- 4: Kim Scott’s Kayang and Me: Noongar Identity and Evidence of Connection to Country 49
- 5: “Wreck/Con/Silly/Nation”: Mimicry, Strategic Essentialism, and the “Friendly Frontier” in Kim Scott’s That Deadman Dance 61
- 6: The International Reception of Kim Scott’s Works: A Case Study Featuring Benang 74
- 7: Traumatic Landscapes: Inscribing Spectrality and Identity in Kim Scott’s “A Refreshing Sleep,” “Capture,” and “An Intimate Act” 88
- 8: Spatial Poetics and the Uses of Ekphrasis in Kim Scott’s “Into the Light” and Other Stories 101
- 9: The Poetry of Kim Scott 114
- 10: The Wirlomin Project and Kim Scott: Empowering Regional Narratives in a Globalized World of Literature 130
- 11: Kim Scott as Boundary Rider: Exploring Possibilities and New Frontiers in Aboriginal Health 146
- 12: An Interview with Kim Scott 158
- Notes on the Contributors 171
- Index 177
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Note on Orthography xi
- Chronology of Key Writings xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1: Kim Scott’s Publishing History in Three Contexts: Australian Aboriginal, National, and International 9
- 2: Kim Scott’s True Country as Aboriginal Bildungsroman 25
- 3: The Land Holds All Things: Kim Scott’s Benang— A Guide to Postcolonial Spatiality 37
- 4: Kim Scott’s Kayang and Me: Noongar Identity and Evidence of Connection to Country 49
- 5: “Wreck/Con/Silly/Nation”: Mimicry, Strategic Essentialism, and the “Friendly Frontier” in Kim Scott’s That Deadman Dance 61
- 6: The International Reception of Kim Scott’s Works: A Case Study Featuring Benang 74
- 7: Traumatic Landscapes: Inscribing Spectrality and Identity in Kim Scott’s “A Refreshing Sleep,” “Capture,” and “An Intimate Act” 88
- 8: Spatial Poetics and the Uses of Ekphrasis in Kim Scott’s “Into the Light” and Other Stories 101
- 9: The Poetry of Kim Scott 114
- 10: The Wirlomin Project and Kim Scott: Empowering Regional Narratives in a Globalized World of Literature 130
- 11: Kim Scott as Boundary Rider: Exploring Possibilities and New Frontiers in Aboriginal Health 146
- 12: An Interview with Kim Scott 158
- Notes on the Contributors 171
- Index 177