At the heart of the Gothic novel proper lies the discursive binary of »self« and »other«, which in colonial literature was quickly filled with representations of the colonial master and his indigenous subject. Contemporary black Australian artists have usurped this colonial Gothic discourse, torn it to pieces, and finally transformed it into an Aboriginal Gothic.This study first develops the theoretical concept of an Aboriginal Gothic and then uses this term as a tool to analyse novels by Vivienne Cleven, Mudrooroo, Kim Scott, Sam Watson, and Alexis Wright as well as films directed by Beck Cole and Tracey Moffatt. It centres on the question of how a genuinely European mode, the Gothic, can be permeated and thus digested by elements of indigenous Australian culture in order to portray the current situation of Aboriginal Australians and to celebrate a recovered cultural identity.
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Band 2 in Representations & ReflectionsSprache:
Englisch
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The Pleasures and Horrors of Eating : The Cultural History of Eating in Anglophone Literature
Gendered (Re)Visions : Constructions of Gender in Audiovisual Media
Who's afraid of…? : Facets of Fear in Anglophone Literature and Film
A Hundred Years of The Secret Garden : Frances Hodgson Burnett's Children's Classic Revisited
Roots in the Air : Construction of Identity in Anglophone Israeli Literature
Nadezda Rumjanceva, Nadežda Rumjanceva
Pride and Prejudice 2.0 : Interpretations, Adaptations and Transformations of Jane Austen's Classic
Hanne Birk, Marion Gymnich
Representing Poverty in the Anglophone Postcolonial World
Exploited, Empowered, Ephemeral : (Re-)Constructions of Childhood in Neo-Victorian Fiction
Denise Burkhard
Concepts of Vernacular Translation from Caxton to Chapman : A Chronological Survey
Armin Paul Frank









