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Frontmatter
Frontmatter
the cambridge
THE CAMBRIDGE
History of Australian
Literature
*
Edited by
PETER PIERCE
c Cambridge University Press 2009
Contents
Introduction 1
peter pierce
Contents
traverses
13 · Australian children’s literature 282
clare bradford
15 · Autobiography 323
david m c cooey
vi
Contents
vii
Contributors
viii
Contributors
peter pierce is Honorary Research Fellow and Professor at the National Centre for
Australian Studies, Monash University.
vivian smith, poet and writer, was formerly Reader in English at the University of
Sydney.
ken stewart is Adjunct Professor at the University of Western Sydney.
stephen torre is Senior Lecturer in English at James Cook University.
penny van toorn was Senior Lecturer in the School of Letters, Art and Media at the
University of Sydney.
elizabeth webby is Emeritus Professor of Australian Literature at the University of
Sydney.
ix
Acknowledgements
My thanks go to all the contributors to this History of Australian Literature. Saying that, I
would also like to pay tribute to those who for various reasons – good and grievous –
were unable to participate. I hope that they will still delight in the book that has resulted
from so many labours. Thanks to Kim Armitage, who commissioned this History for
Cambridge University Press early in 2006, and to the other members of the Press with
whom I have also worked. In these pages previous literary histories of Australia are
given their due, but I would like to thank four long-standing mentors and friends:
Laurie Hergenhan, Harry Heseltine, Brian Kiernan and Shirley Walker. I am particularly
grateful to four co-contributors, John Kinsella, Richard Lansdown, Susan Lever and
Philip Mead; to Peter Ujvari for his work with formatting the book and to Mary Howard
for the index. Richard Nile and Jason Ensor would like to acknowledge the support of
the Australian Research Council for their chapter. On behalf of all the contributors, I
would also like to salute the support that they have received from libraries across the
continent, and from their universities (if they still have them).
Peter Pierce