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Xu Daozhi Xu Daozhi i(9698278 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Xu Daozhi holds a PhD in English literary studies from the University of Hong Kong. Her research interests include postcolonial studies, Indigenous literature, Asian diasporic literature, children’s literature, cultural theory, studies of race and ethnicity. Her 2020 research project looks into the interrelations between Indigenous people and Asian immigrants revealed in contemporary Australian literature.

Source: Provided by author.

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Indigenous Cultural Capital : Postcolonial Narratives in Australian Children's Literature Oxford : Peter Lang , 2018 13918365 2018 multi chapter work criticism

'Children's literature enables young readers to acculturate to socially desirable forms of knowledge, values and ideologies. An increasing number of children's books with Aboriginal themes and motifs, written by Indigenous and non-Indigenous writers in the post-Mabo era, seek to rewrite Aboriginal history through realistic or imaginative modes of expression and, as a counter-discursive agency, they open a path to inculcate young minds with Aboriginal culture and knowledge in a postcolonial context. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concept of cultural capital, Indigenous Cultural Capital: Postcolonial Narratives in Post-Mabo Australian Children's Literature explores how Aboriginal people's histories and cultures are deployed, represented, and transmitted as " Indigenous cultural capital " for young readers, with the purpose of illuminating the complex relations between Aboriginal agency and dominant forces in the postcolonial contact zone and identifying possible tactics of resistance within the domination. The notion of Indigenous cultural capital provides a fresh perspective in the postcolonial readings of Australian children's books.'  (Publication summary)

2019 shortlisted ASAL Awards Alvie Egan Award
Last amended 15 May 2020 08:47:35
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