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Helen Bones

    Helen Bones est une historienne de la littérature spécialisée dans la littérature de la Nouvelle-Zélande, de l'Australie et du monde colonial britannique au sens large au début du XXe siècle. Elle occupe actuellement un poste de recherche en humanités numériques à la Western Sydney University, combinant son intérêt pour les approches méthodologiques numériques et empiriques dans l'étude de l'histoire littéraire et de l'édition. Ses travaux explorent les voix uniques et la production littéraire de cette époque fascinante.

    The Expatriate Myth
    • The Expatriate Myth

      • 242pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,5(2)Évaluer

      Many New Zealand writers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century traveled extensively or lived overseas for a time. In The Expatriate Myth, Helen Bones presents a challenge to this conventional understanding that writers had to leave in order to find literary inspiration and publishing opportunities. Was it actually necessary for them to leave to find success? How prevalent was expatriatism among New Zealand writers? Did their experiences fit the usual tropes about expatriatism and exile? Were they fleeing an oppressive society lacking in literary opportunity? In the field of literary studies, scholars are often consumed with questions about ‘national’ literature and ‘what it means to be a New Zealander’. And yet many of New Zealand’s writers living overseas operated in a transnational way, taking advantage of colonial networks in a way that belies any notion of a single national allegiance. Most who left New Zealand continued to write about and interact with their homeland, and in many cases came back. In this fascinating and clear-sighted book, Helen Bones offers a fresh perspective on some hoary New Zealand literary chestnuts.

      The Expatriate Myth