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Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 Writing Orality : Australian Aboriginal Voices in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Australian Aboriginal stories have thrived for thousands of years through oral tradition and Aboriginal author Alexis Wright invokes this tradition in the construction of her novel Carpentaria. This article investigates the orality of Carpentaria, which stages “oral” narrators who speak differently to Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal readerships. First, using Bakhtin’s notion of “speech genre”, the article explores why Wright creates these two narrative layers. Second, it investigates the language use and tone of voice in the framing narrative that addresses non-Indigenous readers. Third, it looks closely at Wright’s linguistic experimentation in the embedded narrative, creating multiple oral effects through language and mobilising the storytelling dynamics of performance, spontaneity, rhythms and mnemonics. Finally, it discusses how her creative use of orality plays off and with its Western literary conceptions and enacts cross-cultural communication between the two readerships.' (Publication abstract)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon English Studies vol. 105 no. 1 2024 27436762 2024 periodical issue 2024 pg. 118-141
Last amended 1 Feb 2024 09:43:03
118-141 Writing Orality : Australian Aboriginal Voices in Alexis Wright’s Carpentariasmall AustLit logo English Studies
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