Along gender lines: reassessing relationships between Australian novels, gender and genre from 1930-2006.

Date

Authors

Bode, Katherine

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Queensland Press

Abstract

"In 1998, Elizabeth Webby professed a widely accepted account of contemporary Australian literary history. During the 1970s, Australian literature emerged from a period of 'masculinist' conservatism into a 'golden age', manifested in a marked increase in 'Australian publishing and the promotion of Australian literature' and the proliferation of authors other than White Anglo-Celtic Males or 'WACMs'. By the late 1990s, however, the combined impact of 'economic rationalism' and 'globalisation' had rendered this golden age 'well and truly over'. According to Webby, 'WACMs' lost their dominance on literature courses and publishers' lists, but 'reasserted control via the doctrine of economic rationalism at the political level'. But is this accepted - and gendered - account of contemporary Australian literary history accurate? I reconsider this history from a quantitative perspective, drawing on AustLit database records to ask simple but broad questions about the relationships between gender, genre and Australian novels from 1930 to 2006. What number and proportion of Australian novel titles published during this time were by wo/men? What genre were these novels? What trends, if any, are revealed?"

Description

Keywords

Citation

Cite as: Bode, Katherine. ‘Along Gender Lines : Reassessing Relationships between Australian Novels, Gender and Genre from 1939 to 2006.’ Australian Literary Studies, vol. 24, no. 3-4/, 2009. https://doi.org/10.20314/als.22404e64d9

Source

Australian Literary Studies (Special issue: Manifesting Literary Feminisms : Nexus and Faultlines) 24.3-4 (2009): 79-95

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until

Downloads