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Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 Antipodean Modernism : The "Fourth Dimension" in the Writings of Robin Hyde and Ethel Anderson
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'The definition of time as the "fourth dimension" by Albert Einstein and Hermann Minkowski in relativity theory and the adoption of the "fourth dimension" by Charles Howard Hinton to indicate the immensity of space have both fired the imagination of modernists. This essay juxtaposes two Antipodean writers, Robin Hyde and Ethel Anderson, and argues that the implications of the fourth dimension are reflected in both Hyde's and Anderson's outbound-cum-inbound creative routes, directed by their encounters with places and cultures situated in between the Asian and metropolitan North and the Antipodean South. It investigates both Hyde's and Anderson's representation of the intercultural space and the way they commingle different locational points to present an otherwise flat memory and reality. The prominent trans-Tasman adjacency in Hyde's writings and the evocative bond among the southern island countries in Anderson's works allow their representation of the Antipodean home grounds to take on a new light. Hyde's and Anderson's creative sensibility, closely related to their traveling routes, brings in a different way of looking at the "colonial tag" attached to the Antipodean South. The writerly and creative scopes developed from home and from abroad enable both writers to write through a different dimension and with openness, giving direct shape to their literary modernism.'  (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

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    y separately published work icon Antipodes Articulating Southeast Asia and the Antipodes vol. 33 no. 2 2019 21208476 2019 periodical issue 'This issue goes to press ten months into the year of living with COVID-19, which is nearly a full year after the date on the volume’s cover. Part of me wanted to be coy about this delay, simply elide the disjunction between the published date and the actual publication. But to tell the truth, it seems more important to acknowledge where we are and how we are. Antipodes has been running behind schedule for the past few issues, and the patience of our contributors and subscribers has been much appreciated. The delays have yielded some fortuitous timing, such as the publication of Soren Tae Smith’s thoughtful piece on the mosque bombing in Christchurch in the June 2019 issue, apparently just a few months later than the event (although actually a year delayed). “This Is a Difficult Piece to Write” was both a timely and an atemporal reflection on the literal and figurative tragedy of a world that seems increasingly divided at the same time that it finds unity in disasters, naturally and humanly induced. So perhaps it is fitting that Antipodes lags behind time, for now, offering an opportunity to reflect on the present in the past' (Brenda Machosky, Editorial introduction) 2019 pg. 202-219
Last amended 1 Sep 2021 11:24:51
202-219 Antipodean Modernism : The "Fourth Dimension" in the Writings of Robin Hyde and Ethel Andersonsmall AustLit logo Antipodes
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