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<title>Gerald Murnane: Another World in this One</title>
<link>https://hdl.handle.net/2123/22862</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jun 2026 15:07:21 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-06-13T15:07:21Z</dc:date>
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<title>Gerald Murnane: Another World in this One</title>
<url>https://ses.library.usyd.edu.au:443/bitstream/id/e560c3ed-6ea6-42c8-abc7-fa7854bf295f/</url>
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<title>Gerald Murnane: Another World in this One</title>
<link>https://hdl.handle.net/2123/22863</link>
<description>Gerald Murnane: Another World in this One
Uhlmann, Anthony
Front matter only.  'Gerald Murnane: Another World in This One' coincides with a renewed interest in his work. It includes an important new essay by Murnane himself, alongside chapters by established and emerging literary critics from Australia and internationally. Together they provide a stimulating reassessment of Murnane’s diverse body of work.
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<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jan 2020 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Gerald Murnane's plain style</title>
<link>https://hdl.handle.net/2123/22864</link>
<description>Gerald Murnane's plain style
Byron, Mark
The role of grasslands in Gerald Murnane’s fiction is as sustained and pronounced as his self-stated aversion to the coast and the ocean,2 and his uneasy forbearance of mountain ranges. Murnane’s narrative devotion to steppe-like ecologies provokes the question of style and how his narrative strategies might operate dialectically with his chosen geography.
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<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jan 2020 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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