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Imagined Landscapes by Keven McQueen

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Imagined Landscapes

Geovisualizing Australian Spatial Narratives

Keven McQueen, Jane Stadler, Peta Mitchell

Indiana University Press · Print & ebook · December 21, 2015

Reading lane: Australian & Oceanian Literary Criticism

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Australian & Oceanian Literary Criticism and Haunted & Unexplained Sites.Publisher: Indiana University Press.

Book Details

Authors
Keven McQueen, Jane Stadler, Peta Mitchell
Publisher
Indiana University Press
Published
December 21, 2015
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Australian & Oceanian Literary Criticism · Haunted & Unexplained Sites
Reading lane
Australian & Oceanian Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Australian & Oceanian Literary Criticism

  • Literary Criticism

  • Social Science

About This Book

Imagined Landscapes teams geocritical analysis with digital visualization techniques to map and interrogate films, novels, and plays in which space and place figure prominently. Drawing upon A Cultural Atlas of Australia , a database-driven interactive digital map that can be used to identify patterns of representation in Australia's cultural landscape, the book presents an integrated perspective on the translation of space across narrative forms and pioneers new ways of see...

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Imagined Landscapes teams geocritical analysis with digital visualization techniques to map and interrogate films, novels, and plays in which space and place figure prominently. Drawing upon A Cultural Atlas of Australia , a database-driven interactive digital map that can be used to identify patterns of representation in Australia's cultural landscape, the book presents an integrated perspective on the translation of space across narrative forms and pioneers new ways of seeing and understanding landscape. It offers fresh insights on cultural topography and spatial history by examining the technical and conceptual challenges of georeferencing fictional and fictionalized places in narratives. Among the items discussed are Wake in Fright , a novel by Kenneth Cook, adapted iconically to the screen and recently onto the stage; the Australian North as a mythic space; spatial and temporal narrative shifts in retellings of the story of Alexander Pearce, a convict who gained notoriety for resorting to cannibalism after escaping from a remote Tasmanian penal colony; travel narratives and road movies set in Western Australia; and the challenges and spatial politics of mapping spaces for which there are no coordinates.

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