Question of Commitment

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A01=Susan Lever
Agnostics
Australian Life
Australian literature
Australian Poetry
Australian Poets
Australian society
Australian Writers
Author_Susan Lever
Category=DSBH
Centennial Park
Cold War cultural politics
Communist Writers
Contemporary Society
creative innovation studies
Democratic Labor Party
Early Fifties
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Frank Hardy
Judah Waten
Late Sixties
literary modernism Australia
Literary Nationalism
national identity discourse
Natural World
Patrick White
political commitments
Postwar Australia
postwar intellectual history
Randolph Stow
Reedy River
Second World War Australia
social changes
Socialist Realist Writers
Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll
Sundowners
technology and art debate
writer political engagement analysis
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367717339
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the years since the Second World War, Australia has seen a period of literary creativity which outshines any earlier period in the nation's literary history. This creativity has its beginnings in the arguments and alignments which emerged at the end of the War, and the changes in perceptions of art and society which occurred during the fifties and early sixties.

A Question of Commitment examines the attitudes of writers as diverse as James McAuley, Frank Hardy, Judith Wright, Patrick White and A. D. Hope, as they responded to a changing Australian society during the postwar years. Through their work and that of many others, it considers the debates about literary nationalism, the artistic politics of the Cold War, the threat of technology to art in the Atomic Age, and the nature of the writer's role in the new society. It documents the way in which the political commitments of some writers and the resistance to commitment of others were challenged by political and social changes of the late fifties.

Susan McKernan's lively exploration of Australia's writers in a time of innovation provides the reader with the context needed to understand the creative choices they made and, in so doing, introduces wider intellectual and cultural issues which remain relevant to this day.

Susan McKernan is a graduate of the Australian National University and the University of Sydney. A frequent reviewer for the Bulletin and Australian literary journals, she has taught literature in Australian universities for a number of years and lectures in English at the University College, Australian Defence Force Academy.

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