Brigitta Olubas
Shirley Hazzard is widely regarded as one of Australia’s finest novelists, even though she published only four novels during her long lifetime. Now, Professor Brigitta Olubas from the University of New South Wales has written the first major literary biography of the writer in Shirley Hazzard: A writing life (Virago/Farrar, Straus and Giroux). In this week’s ABR podcast, ABR Editor Peter Rose interviews Professor Olubas about her study of the ‘complex, alluring, peripatetic artist’.
... (read more)Elizabeth Harrower: Critical essays by Elizabeth McMahon and Brigitta Olubas
Shirley Hazzard: New Critical Essays edited by Brigitta Olubas
Australian Literary Studies, Vol. 28, no. 1-2 edited by Leigh Dale and Tanya Dalziell
Shirley Hazzard: Literary Expatriate and Cosmopolitan Humanist by Brigitta Olubas
Broomstick: Personal Reflections of Leonie Kramer by Leonie Kramer
Patrick White within the Western Literary Tradition by John Beston & Remembering Patrick White edited by Elizabeth McMahon and Brigitta Olubas
In October 2009, Shirley Hazzard spoke at the New York launch of the Macquarie PEN Anthology of Australian Literature. Hazzard read from People in Glass Houses, her early collection of satirical stories about the UN bureaucracy. Her appearance serves to remind Australian readers that Hazzard continues to occupy a defining, if somewhat attenuated, place within the expansive field of what Nicholas Jose described in 2008, on taking up the annual Harvard Chair of Australian Studies, as ‘writing that engage[s] us with the international arena from the Australian perspective’. Jose went on to cite Hazzard’s most recent novel, The Great Fire (2003), as part of ‘a range of material which Americans would not necessarily think of as Australian’.
... (read more)