(1) If you're trying to think through/develop/write a complicated argument about Aboriginal writing and its relationship to ideas about 'literary merit', a 180-word book review being written to deadline is not the place to do it, and anyway you're far better off waiting for your dear friend L, co-author of Intimate Horizons: The Post-Colonial Sacred in Australian Literature, to arrive tomorrow to give her seminar at Adelaide U so that you can pick her brains about the current state, if any, of academic debates around this question and her own ideas about it.
(2) Work really does expand to fill the time available.
What I'm reading
-
James Meek, Nobody Wants To Hear This, London Review of Books, v46 n22, 21
November 2024
Something like this is happening in the Kharkiv of 2024. Vladimi...
2 hours ago
4 comments:
Or try stretching your mind around the subject of this afternoon's postgrad seminar where we talked about the uncanny and viewed video clips to get a taste of it. see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1czBcnX1Ww
Fascinating stuff.
Work really does expand to fill the time available.
Even overflows it.
Mindy beat me to it.
Capcha: yarrolot
An interesting book, and the seminar sounds great as well. (The topic seems to resonate with some recent discussions about Aboriginal writing, literary merit and 'canonisation'.) It's always reassuring to consult with colleagues rather than battle on one's own. It's good to see that confirmed here.
Post a Comment