R Gerster
8 points - 2 hours per week - Second semester - Clayton
Objectives Upon completion of this subject students should have an understanding of the place of the city in Australian literature and local identity, the gendering of urban experience, and literary innovations aimed at depicting urban challenges.
Synopsis This subject examines the representation of urban life in twentieth-century Australian literature. Redirecting Australian cultural debate away from its traditional emphasis on 'the bush', the subject investigates how the fictionalised city has acted as a focus for cultural redefinition and as a catalyst for literary innovation. The selected texts represent a range of modes used to construct the city: popular fiction, social realism, autobiography, social satire, the urban picaresque and the urban dystopia, and recent postmodernist fiction. Specific areas of study include the literary 'cartography' of cities in the creation of a spatial and social environment, the use of architectural motifs, the interplay of urban landscape and narrative form, regionalism and expatriation, sociological perspectives and political imperatives in fictionalising the city, and varying responses to inner-urban and suburban environments.
Assessment Written (3000 words): 50% - Test (1.5 hours): 25% - Seminar participation/seminar paper (1500 words): 25%
Prescribed texts
Anderson J Tirra Lirra by the river Penguin
Cohen B Snowdome Allen and Unwin
Drewe R (ed.) The Penguin book of the city Penguin
Garner H Monkey grip Penguin
Grenville K Lilian's story Allen and Unwin
Maloney S The brush-off Text Publishing
Malouf D Johnno Penguin
Stone L Jonah Angus and Robertson
White P The vivisector Penguin
Winton T Cloudstreet McPhee Gribble