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Promoting Postcolonial Australia: New Readings of Miles Franklin and Joseph Furphy: Politics, Literature, & Film

Autor John Uhr Lee Trepanier
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 aug 2026
Promoting Postcolonial Australia: New Reading of Miles Franklin and Joseph Furphy uses Australian literary practice as a case study in the emergence of modern democratic literary culture. John Uhr merges traditional political theory and contemporary literary theory in this political reinterpretation of novels by two classic Australian writers: the feminist Miles Franklin and civic republican Joseph Furphy. Examines three of Franklin's novels: My Brilliant Career, Some Everyday Folk and Dawn, and All that Swagger. Surveys two of Furphy's novels: Rigby's Romance and The Buln-Buln and the Brolga, which were both written under Furphy's pseudonym Tom Collins. Despite their reputations as Australian nationalists, Uhr argues that Franklin and Furphy should be seen as pioneering examples of postcolonial literary theory as later devised by the late literary critic Edward Said, Said's framework is surprisingly relevant to writers like Franklin and Furphy who blend pre-modern or Stoic philosophy and post-liberal or communitarian perspectives in their critical portraits of the limits of conventional liberalism for emerging democracies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9798765156193
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 5 b/w Figures
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Politics, Literature, & Film

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

List of Figures
Preface

Part One
Introduction: Relating Franklin and Furphy
1. Revising Postcolonial Literary Theory

Part Two
2. Feminism in Franklin's My Brilliant Career
3. Socialism in Furphy's Rigby's Romance
4. Elections in Franklin's Some Everyday Folk and Dawn
5. Truth-telling in Furphy's The Buln-Buln and the Brolga
6 Democracy in Franklin's All That Swagger

Part Three
7. Reframing Franklin's Philosophical Furphy
Conclusion: Promoting Postcolonialism

About the Author

Recenzii

In this stimulating study of two once famous but now neglected Australian novelists - Joseph Furphy and Miles Franklin - John Uhr stakes their respective claims as creative postcolonial political thinkers, civic humanists and stoic cosmopolitans. More broadly, his book is an eloquent plea to take seriously the role of the novel in the study of political theory, and to treat the ideas of novelists as a fruitful source of 'spiritual exercises' in fostering civic virtue and renewing liberal democracy.