World Crime Fiction: Making Sense of a Global Genre. This project aims to generate new knowledge about the worldwide popularity of crime fiction by analysing the genre’s engagement with the major global challenges of our time, from climate change to the crisis of democracy. Using data from scholars and fans across all continents, and employing an innovative comparative methodology, it seeks to produce a new framework for analysing the global practice of crime fiction. Outcomes include a deeper u ....World Crime Fiction: Making Sense of a Global Genre. This project aims to generate new knowledge about the worldwide popularity of crime fiction by analysing the genre’s engagement with the major global challenges of our time, from climate change to the crisis of democracy. Using data from scholars and fans across all continents, and employing an innovative comparative methodology, it seeks to produce a new framework for analysing the global practice of crime fiction. Outcomes include a deeper understanding of the capacities of crime fiction to explore the complex relationship between crime, law and justice in various settings. The project will benefit Australia by creating new insights into the unique contribution of Australian, including Indigenous, crime writers to this truly global genre.Read moreRead less
Reading Writing Lives: Publishing & Preserving Australian Literary Archives. In the last decades of the twentieth century, it became possible for Australian writers to have significant careers thanks to the establishment of the Literature Board of the Australia Council for the Arts. This project will bring to light the correspondence between Australian authors Shirley Hazzard and Elizabeth Harrower and between Hazzard and US scholar Donald Keene through these years. It will throw light on this h ....Reading Writing Lives: Publishing & Preserving Australian Literary Archives. In the last decades of the twentieth century, it became possible for Australian writers to have significant careers thanks to the establishment of the Literature Board of the Australia Council for the Arts. This project will bring to light the correspondence between Australian authors Shirley Hazzard and Elizabeth Harrower and between Hazzard and US scholar Donald Keene through these years. It will throw light on this historical period and how writers’ careers flourished, as it accesses this new information for the first time. It will produce two books of writers' correspondence, two exhibitions of writers' archives and libraries, and several scholarly and public-facing essays to make this new knowledge accessible to a broad audience.Read moreRead less