Hard Frost: Structures of Feeling in New Zealand Literature

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Hard Frost: Structures of Feeling in New Zealand Literature
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:370
Category/GenreLiterature - history and criticism
ISBN/Barcode 9781776561629
ClassificationsDewey:823.093530
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Te Herenga Waka University Press
Imprint Victoria University Press
Publication Date 12 October 2017
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

"How did New Zealand writers make nationalism out of modernism? What did the process owe to a revolution in sexuality? And what did this mean for writing by women as the 1920s gave way to the 1930s? Writing as a poet as well as a historian, as a critic of ideology, and as a self-confessed fan of the nationalist legacy, John Newton tackles these intriguing questions with warmth, insight and critical precision. The first part of an ambitious trilogy, Hard Frost shows us a fresh way of looking at New Zealand literature of the 20th century. It details the pleasures of essential texts. It also roams far and wide through their contexts: from mountaineering to moa excavation, from beauty pageants to the history of psychoanalysis. In readings of such foundational authors as Mansfield, Sargeson, Curnow and Hyde, Hard Frost proposes that our literary history is not just a story about books but a forgotten history of feelings. We know these writers well, yet they have so much still to tell us. This lucidly argued work will change the way we understand them"--Back cover.

Author Biography

Born in Blenheim in 1959, John Newton grew up on a sheep farm at Port Underwood in the Marlborough Sounds. He taught for two years in the English Department at Melbourne, and from 1995 to 2009 in the English Department at the University of Canterbury, and now lives in Wellington. The Double Rainbow: James K Baxter, Ngati Hau and the Jerusalem Commune was published by VUP in 2009. John Newton's debut volume Tales from the Angler's Eldorado came out in 1985, and his work is represented in most of the major anthologies to have appeared since that time. Lives of the Poets (2010) is the long-awaited follow-up.