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Mallarmé réchauffé

by
October 2009, no. 315

Australian Literature and the Symbolist Movement by John Hawke

University of Wollongong Press, $36.95 pb, 176 pp

Mallarmé réchauffé

by
October 2009, no. 315

In one of Kenneth Slessor’s surviving notebooks now held in the National Library, there is a curious entry consisting of approximately eighty names. This appears to be a list of those people the poet counted as friends over his lifetime; many of the names are marked in pencil with the forlorn abbreviation ‘d’. What might a literary historian make of such a list? It might be evidence of a romantic sensibility, a sign of Slessor’s faith in the commemorative powers of language, arguably the precondition for writing elegiac poetry. On the other hand, the list might be held up as proof of a bleak modernism, indicative of Slessor’s existential anxiety, the names being little more than fragments shored against the ruins of time. Of course, the question of whether a particular poet should be regarded as a romantic or a modernist depends entirely on what is meant by those loaded terms. This is one of the pitfalls of literary history: its basic terms of inquiry are often equivocal.

Jeffrey Poacher reviews 'Australian Literature and the Symbolist Movement' by John Hawke

Australian Literature and the Symbolist Movement

by John Hawke

University of Wollongong Press, $36.95 pb, 176 pp

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