A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia

Within Australia, the concentration of the “field of cultural production” in Sydney and Melbourne results in the perception that the local and specific of these places constitutes the “universal.” Any attention paid to the local and specific in the cultural products of other Australian locations, su...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Henningsgaard, Per
Other Authors: O'Reilly, N.
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Cambria Press 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70740
_version_ 1848763392199753728
author Henningsgaard, Per
author2 O'Reilly, N.
author_facet O'Reilly, N.
Henningsgaard, Per
author_sort Henningsgaard, Per
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Within Australia, the concentration of the “field of cultural production” in Sydney and Melbourne results in the perception that the local and specific of these places constitutes the “universal.” Any attention paid to the local and specific in the cultural products of other Australian locations, such as Western Australia, therefore constitutes the “regional.” In an international or global context, however, Australia constitutes the “regional” rather than the “universal,” since the relatively greater concentrations of instruments of cultural production in places such as London and New York City indirectly confers upon them the latter title. Clearly, there is a parallel between the dynamic that governs Australia’s negotiations with the international literary community, and the dynamic that governs the negotiations of a more conventionally conceived region (such as Western Australia) with its national literary culture. Furthermore, there are parallels between this dynamic and the dynamic responsible for producing postcolonial literature, a literary movement that “asserted [itself] by foregrounding the tension with the colonial power, and emphasising ... differences from the assumptions of the imperial centre.” This chapter hopes that by emphasizing the postcolonial nature of Australian literature and analyzing Australian texts from a postcolonial theoretical perspective, it might diversify our understanding of Australian literature by supporting the introduction of a regional perspective. (Supplied by author).
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:02:44Z
format Book Chapter
id curtin-20.500.11937-70740
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:02:44Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Cambria Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-707402019-03-08T02:43:00Z A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia Henningsgaard, Per O'Reilly, N. Within Australia, the concentration of the “field of cultural production” in Sydney and Melbourne results in the perception that the local and specific of these places constitutes the “universal.” Any attention paid to the local and specific in the cultural products of other Australian locations, such as Western Australia, therefore constitutes the “regional.” In an international or global context, however, Australia constitutes the “regional” rather than the “universal,” since the relatively greater concentrations of instruments of cultural production in places such as London and New York City indirectly confers upon them the latter title. Clearly, there is a parallel between the dynamic that governs Australia’s negotiations with the international literary community, and the dynamic that governs the negotiations of a more conventionally conceived region (such as Western Australia) with its national literary culture. Furthermore, there are parallels between this dynamic and the dynamic responsible for producing postcolonial literature, a literary movement that “asserted [itself] by foregrounding the tension with the colonial power, and emphasising ... differences from the assumptions of the imperial centre.” This chapter hopes that by emphasizing the postcolonial nature of Australian literature and analyzing Australian texts from a postcolonial theoretical perspective, it might diversify our understanding of Australian literature by supporting the introduction of a regional perspective. (Supplied by author). 2010 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70740 Cambria Press fulltext
spellingShingle Henningsgaard, Per
A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title_full A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title_fullStr A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title_full_unstemmed A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title_short A postcolonial perspective on regional literature in Australia
title_sort postcolonial perspective on regional literature in australia
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70740