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The Vivisector by Patrick White
The Vivisector by Patrick White







The Vivisector by Patrick White The Vivisector by Patrick White

In their personal life, White and Lascaris' home became a regular haunt for noted figures from all levels of society.Īlthough he achieved a great deal of critical applause, and was hailed as a national hero after his Nobel win, White retained a challenged relationship with the Australian public and ordinary readers. He became known as an outspoken champion for the disadvantaged, for Indigenous rights, and for the teaching and promotion of art, in a culture he deemed often backward and conservative.

The Vivisector by Patrick White

However after their subsequent move to the inner suburb of Centennial Park, White experienced an increased passion for activism. In 1973, he was awarded the Nobel Prize "for an epic and psychological narrative art which has introduced a new continent into literature."įrom 1947 to 1964, White and Lascaris lived a retired life on the outer fringes of Sydney. His fiction freely employs shifting narrative vantages and the stream of consciousness technique. Home again, White published a total of twelve novels, two short story collections, eight plays, as well as a miscellany of non-fiction. The pair returned to Australia after the war. Publishing his first two novels to critical acclaim in the UK, White then enlisted to serve in World War II, where he met his lifelong partner, the Greek Manoly Lascaris.

The Vivisector by Patrick White

Patrick Victor Martindale White was an Australian author widely regarded as one of the major English-language novelists of the 20th century, and winner of the 1973 Nobel Prize for Literature.īorn in England while his Australian parents were visiting family, White grew up in Sydney before studying at Cambridge.









The Vivisector by Patrick White