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Writing-Between:Australian and Canadian Ficto-criticism

Author Information Thesis Files
Last Name Flavell
Other Names Helen
Title Doctor
E-mail hflavell@central.murdoch.edu.au
Division Arts
School Arts
Degree Program Dcotor of Philosophy (PhD)
01Front.pdf 33k
02Introduction.pdf 62k
03Ch1TheFirst.pdf 105k
04Ch2How.pdf 167k
05Ch3Danger.pdf 253k
06Ch4BecomingW.pdf 175k
07Ch5BecomingmingM.pdf 193k
08Ch6Risking.pdf 118k
09GeneralConclusion.pdf 40k
10WorksCited.pdf 75k
Thesis Document Information
Thesis Type PhD Doctorate
Title Writing-Between:Australian and Canadian Ficto-criticism
Date 2004
Abstract The current cultural climate, theoretical developments, the changing state of the tertiary institution, and the increasing presence of voices from the margin have contributed to the critical re-evaluation of academic writing as a way of knowing and representing the world. At the same time, hybrid forms of writing, those that exist in the interstices of established generic codes, are experiencing increased critical attention. Yet, despite the fact that genre has become an inadequate notion to describe boundary-crossing writing, little appears to have shifted in the way these forms are understood. Dominant methodologies tend to render what is between less visible or valid, and they define this space only in terms of its relation to set borders. Located at the boundaries of what is familiar and unfamiliar, “writing-between” is a contentious space where elements are combined without clear rules to aid identification. In this thesis the term “ficto-criticism” is used broadly to describe generically transgressive writing that blurs the defining lines between creative and critical texts. The thesis explores the political and theoretical implications of writing-between through a discussion of Australian and Canadian work in English (or English translation), which display the characteristics of the ficto-critical form. This thesis argues for a critical understanding of ficto-criticism that conceptualises it as a highly political strategy of literary intervention, rather than as a mere trend toward cross-genre writing. Indeed, rather than understanding it as surface play, the thesis argues that ficto-critical practice is deeply troubled by the oppressive role of academic writing and that, significantly, its emergence was highly influenced by postcolonial and feminist theory. Thus, ficto-critical practice interrogates the violence of representation and explores what is left out and or misrepresented through that process. The thesis applies Deleuze and Guattari’s concept-tools to articulate a methodology by virtue of which desire and ficto-criticism are understood as productive forms that are liberated from an equation of lack. The tension between ficto-criticism as an open practice and the tradition of scholarly writing, which requires a clear fixed proposition and outcomes, mirrors the project of ficto-criticism, which seeks to unlearn one’s authority and privilege as the beginning of a process towards developing an ethical relationship with the other.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Committee Information
Supervisor Prof. Vijay Mishra
Email Mishar@Murdoch.edu.au

Murdoch University Australian Digital Theses Research and Development
Research and Development

The ADT Program participants acknowledge the work done by Virginia Polytechnic Institute. This national pilot project utilises and adapts the concepts and deposit process software first developed at Virginia Polytechnic Institute.