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Anouk Lang Anouk Lang i(A101240 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Modernist Fiction/Alternative Modernisms : Australia, Canada, New Zealand Anouk Lang , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Oxford History of the Novel in English : The Novel in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the South Pacific Since 1950 2017; (p. 190-204)

'What is it about modernism, that multivalent category riven with internal contradictions, that makes literary criticism continue to value it as a category?...' (Introduction)

1 Queering Sarsaparilla : Patrick White's Deviant Modernism Anouk Lang , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: Patrick White beyond the Grave : New Critical Perspectives 2015; (p. 193-204)
'...Anouk Lang demonstrates how, now a more overt scholarly exploration is 'out' it can contribute to understandings of modernism's global reach.' (Introduction 10)
1 1 y separately published work icon Patrick White beyond the Grave : New Critical Perspectives Ian Henderson (editor), Anouk Lang (editor), New York (City) : Anthem Press , 2015 8798674 2015 anthology criticism

'Patrick White (1912–1990) won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973 and remains one of Australia’s most celebrated writers. This book represents new work by an outstanding list of White scholars from around the globe. This collection of diverse and original essays is notable for its acknowledgement of White’s homosexuality in relation to the development of his literary style, in its consideration of the way his writing ‘works’ on/with readers, and for its contextualizing of his life and oeuvre in relation to London and to London life.' (Publication summary)

1 Going Against the Flow : The Secret River and Colonialism’s Structuring Oppositions Anouk Lang , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: Postcolonial Text , vol. 9 no. 1 2014;

In its retelling of the narrative of colonial settlement in Australia, Kate Grenville’s The Secret River (2005) resonates with debates over Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal relations in contemporary Australia, as its representational strategies can be seen as undermining the kinds of metaphysical oppositions identified by theorists such as Benita Parry, Frantz Fanon and Homi Bhabha as crucial to the structuring of colonialism’s discursive field. The question I take up in this essay is how successful Grenville’s novel is in “repossessing the signifying function appropriated by colonialist representation” that Parry identifies as a necessary, yet insufficient, strategy for laying bare the rhetorical underpinning of the colonial enterprise. How successful is the novel in reconfiguring these signifying relations even as it relies on them to retell a mythic narrative of nation-building? And what does this analytic framework reveal about the blindnesses and omissions of canonical postcolonial criticism with respect to settler-invader contexts? [Author's abstract]

1 Troping the Masculine : Australian Animals, the Nation, and the Popular Imagination Anouk Lang , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 24 no. 1 2010; (p. 5-10)
1 Judith Wright and Frank Scott : Genering Modernist Networks in Australia and Canada Anouk Lang , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , October vol. 22 no. 4 2006; (p. 403-416)
Lang compares the early careers of Judith Wright and Canadian poet F. R. Scott, paying particular attention to their relationship with modernism and little magazines and teasing out the implications of gender for relationships to campus criticism and literary movements in the 1940s.
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