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4 - Great Expectations on Australian television

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

John O. Jordan
Affiliation:
Professor of English and Director of The Dickens Project University of California, Santa Cruz
John Glavin
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
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Summary

I begin with two quotations. The first is from the opening paragraph of an essay by postcolonial theorist, Homi Bhabha. Bhabha writes:

There is a scene in the cultural writings of English colonialism which repeats so insistently after the early nineteenth century – and, through that repetition, so triumphantly inaugurates a literature of empire – that I am bound to repeat it once more. It is the scenario, played out in the wild and wordless wastes of colonial India, Africa, the Caribbean, of the sudden, fortuitous discovery of the English book. It is, like all myths of origin, memorable for its balance between epiphany and enunciation. The discovery of the book is, at once, a moment of originality and authority. It is, as well, a process of displacement that, paradoxically, makes the presence of the book wondrous to the extent to which it is repeated, translated, misread, displaced. It is with the emblem of the English book – “signs taken for wonders” – as an insignia of colonial authority and a signifier of colonial desire and discipline that I want to begin this chapter.

(Bhabha 1993: 102)

Bhabha proceeds to give several examples illustrating the scenario of the “English book.”

Type
Chapter
Information
Dickens on Screen , pp. 45 - 52
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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References

Great Expectations: The Untold Story. 1987. Written and directed by Tim Burstall. Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Bhabha, Homi. 1993. The Location of Culture. London: Routledge
Demarr, James. 1893. Adventures in Australia Fifty Years Ago. London: Swan Sonnenhein
Ward, Russel. 1958. The Australian Legend. Melbourne: Oxford University Press

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