The Sugarcane Novel: Questions of Genre and Region
Smyth, Elizabeth (2024) The Sugarcane Novel: Questions of Genre and Region. Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, 24 (2).
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Abstract
Cheryl Taylor and Elizabeth Perkins (2007) describe the novels of John Naish as either ‘sugar country’ or ‘canefields’ novels. More recently, contributors to Georgic Literature and the Environment: Working Land, Reworking Genre (2023) have examined farming literature to further understandings of ‘the georgic’ as either a genre or a mode. This paper builds on this work by examining the implications of establishing a genre of ‘the sugarcane novel’ and mode of ‘sugarcane literature’. Using John Frow’s Genre (2006) as a guide, I argue for the sugarcane plant rather than humans and land as the core determinant of these. This allows the inclusion of texts with urban settings, such as Ronald McKie’s The Crushing (1977), and thus offers a way of curating a collection of works to enable richer understandings of the social and environmental influences of sugarcane than by considering only those set on farms. Given that sugarcane grows in and symbolises distinct geographical regions, I also explore the boundaries, interplay and entanglement of genre and region and move away from an anthropocentric conception of region as marginal. I argue that region is locationally and temporally mutable according to perspective and circumstance, and that regional literature can be entirely disconnected from the tangible properties of a geographical region.
Item ID: | 83802 |
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Item Type: | Article (Research - C1) |
ISSN: | 1833-6027 |
Keywords: | region, genre, novel, sugarcane, farm novel, Australia, georgic |
Copyright Information: | JASAL provides open access to all of its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. Such access is associated with increased readership and citation levels. JASAL uses open source software, developed by the Public Knowledge Project <http://pkp.ubc.ca> to help make open access economically viable, and to improve the scholarly and public quality of research. Articles are made available under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. |
Additional Information: | First published on 9 May 2025. |
Date Deposited: | 03 Dec 2024 02:17 |
FoR Codes: | 47 LANGUAGE, COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE > 4705 Literary studies > 470502 Australian literature (excl. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander literature) @ 100% |
SEO Codes: | 13 CULTURE AND SOCIETY > 1302 Communication > 130203 Literature @ 100% |
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