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Issue Details: First known date: 2016... 2016 ‘Incomprehensible Wonder’ : Elegiac Expression in Dorothy Porter’s Wild Surmise
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This article contends that Dorothy Porter’s verse novel Wild Surmise (2002) is a postmodern elegiac work, which explores the role of unfulfilled desire and mourning. It is through Porter’s paralleled exploration of the ‘incomprehensible wonder’ offered by outer space, alongside the familiarities of domestic life that allow Wild Surmise to explore the grief attached to desire and loss. In order to read Wild Surmise as an elegiac work this paper will predominantly draw from studies of modern and postmodern Anglophone elegies. This approach will allow for a literary-historical account for how the elegiac mode stems from the elegy genre and will reveal how a discussion of elegy conventions may expand upon an understanding of the elegiac mode. This paper is informed by the scholarship of Jahan Ramazani (1994), Karen E. Smythe (1992), David Kennedy (2007) and Tammy Clewell (2009), specifically in relation to their writing of the politics of mourning and consolation within elegiac works. Accordingly, Wild Surmise will be interpreted as a postmodern elegiac work due the ways in which desire, mourning and consolation are depicted throughout the verse novel.' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    JASAL World Readers : The Transnational Locations of Australian Literature vol. 16 no. 2 2016 periodical issue

    'This issue opens with an important collection of writings on acclaimed novelist Alexis Wright. In ‘The Unjusticeable and the Imaginable’ Philip Mead aims to provide a deep context for Wright’s most recent work in terms of her engagement with questions of sovereignty. Mead takes up Wright’s claim that ‘The art of storytelling […] is a form of activism that allows us to work with our ideas through our imagination’ and through this lens tracks the conceptual paths through which Aboriginal sovereignty becomes imaginable. In ‘Orality and Narrative Invention in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria,’ Geoff Rodoreda argues that the novel’s ‘narrative framework may well be a unique novelistic invention.’ Focusing on Wright’s use of voice in the novel, Rodoreda proposes that ‘Carpentaria … flatly rejects this paradigm of the inevitable demise of the oral upon contact with the written. What Alexis Wright does in her text is to take orality by the scruff of the neck, as it were, shake it free of all of its pejoratives and sneering deprecations, and boldly insert it back into the text, empowered.’ For Rodoreda, orality enables Wright to challenge the predominant role of written narrative in postcolonial settings, and ‘to portray a sovereign Aboriginal mindset in an authentically Indigenous storytelling mode.’' (Publication abstract)

    2016
Last amended 19 Jan 2017 11:34:39
http://openjournals.library.usyd.edu.au/index.php/JASAL/article/view/11408 ‘Incomprehensible Wonder’ : Elegiac Expression in Dorothy Porter’s Wild Surmisesmall AustLit logo JASAL
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