DOAJ Open Access 2017

From Cosmopolitanism to Planetary Conviviality: Suneeta Peres da Costa and Michelle de Kretser

Alejandra Moreno Álvarez

Abstrak

Veronica Brady, vigorous supporter of Aboriginal causes and deeply concerned with social-injustice issues, underlined that Anglo-Australians were to be excommunicated from the land until they would come to terms with it and its first peoples (in Jones 1997). Nearly twenty years after this statement was postulated, it is my purpose in this paper to look at the land from an Anglo-Australian and non-Indigenous Australian perspective in order to assess if Australian contemporary society has moved beyond what Brady considered a “super ego status” and reconciled to the presence not only of its Indigenous, but also its non-Indigenous others. To do so I will exemplify novels which are part of and influenced by the matrix of relations and social forces in which non-indigenous Australian writers are situated on, including Suneeta Peres da Costa’s Homework (1999) and Michelle de Kretser’s Questions of Travel (2013).

Penulis (1)

A

Alejandra Moreno Álvarez

Format Sitasi

Álvarez, A.M. (2017). From Cosmopolitanism to Planetary Conviviality: Suneeta Peres da Costa and Michelle de Kretser. https://doi.org/10.1344/co20182284-94

Akses Cepat

PDF tidak tersedia langsung

Cek di sumber asli →
Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.1344/co20182284-94
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2017
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.1344/co20182284-94
Akses
Open Access ✓