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Conclusion: American Literature’s Terra Incognita
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Published:January 2014
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Abstract
The book concludes by considering why Australasia has been such a neglected field in discussions of American literature. It tracks the history of this field back to one of the first American Australianists, C. Hartley Grattan, but argues that Americans have too often sought to imagine Australia in their own likeness, according to received assumptions of liberal independence, rather than acknowledging the colonial assumptions that have also been embedded within US historical experience. It also suggests, conversely, that Australian critics have tended simply to follow these assumptions of US cultural superiority. However, Thomas Pynchon’s novel Against the Day, written from within an era of globalization, is cited as a twenty-first-century American novel that brings these antipodean and planetary horizons more fully into view.
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