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Precise and imprecise geographies in Christina Stead's "seven poor men of Sydney"

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 07:48 authored by Harriet EdquistHarriet Edquist
This paper will examine the literary representation of space and place in Seven Poor Men of Sydney (1934), the first published novel of one of Australia's foremost writers, Christina Stead. Seven Poor Men of Sydney is held to be one of the most accurate and vivid representations of Sydney in modern Australian literature, but by focusing attention on where action actually takes place in the novel, this paper argues for a more nuanced understanding of Stead's literary geography. It shows how only a relatively small part of Sydney is actually described and how imprecisely described and vague locales occupy more textual space than the city itself, thereby throwing into contention accepted understandings of the relationship between Stead and her fictional settings.

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Journal

The Cartographic Journal

Volume

46

Issue

4

Start page

343

End page

349

Total pages

7

Publisher

Maney Publishing

Place published

London, UK

Language

English

Copyright

The British Cartographic Society 2009

Former Identifier

2006017992

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-12-23

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