Brian Elliott (writer)
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Brian Robinson Elliott (11 April 1910 – 29 August 1991) was a writer and academic in Adelaide, South Australia, hailed as the first academic to regard Australian literature as a worthy field of study.


Career

Elliott was born in Adelaide, the younger son of Arthur J. Elliott of Parkside, South Australia. He was educated at Victor Harbor and matriculated at Unley High School. He received his BA in English and French at the University of Adelaide in 1931. He was involved in amateur theatre as producer, with the Players' Guild and WEA Little Theatre. Elliott taught English at two senior high schools over six years, during which time his thesis was accepted for qualification as Master of Arts. He was appointed temporary assistant in English at the University of Western Australia in 1938. Elliott was appointed lecturer in English at the University of Adelaide in 1941. He was appointed reader in Australian literature in 1961, a post he held until 1975. He is reputedly the first critic to suspect the Ern Malley papers of being a hoax and was called as an expert witness in the trial. ''Mapped but Not Known: The Australian Landscape of the Imagination'' was compiled by P. Robin Eaden and F. H. "Tim" Mares presented to Elliott on 11 April 1985, marking his 75th birthday, published 1986.


Honours and recognition

Elliott was a Foundation Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He was presented with the honorary award, Doctor of the University of Adelaide, following his retirement in 1975. In the
1976 Australia Day Honours The 1976 Australia Day Honours were announced on 26 January 1976 by the Governor General of Australia, Sir John Kerr. The Australia Day Honours are the first of the two major annual honours lists, announced on Australia Day (26 January), with the o ...
he was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia.


Works

*''
James Hardy Vaux James Hardy Vaux (born 1782, living 1841, date of death unknown) was an English-born convict transported to Australia on three separate occasions. He was the author of ''Memoirs of James Hardy Vaux'' including ''A Vocabulary of the Flash Languag ...
'' (1944 essay) *''Leviathan's Inch'' (1946 novel) *''Singing to the Cattle'' (1947 essay) *''Coast to Coast'' (ed., 1948) *'' Marcus Clarke'' (1958 biography) *''The Landscape of Poetry'' (1967 criticism) *''Bards in the Wilderness'' (ed., 1970) *'' Adam Lindsay Gordon'' (ed., 1973) *''The Jindyworobaks'' (ed., 1979)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Elliott, Brian 1910 births 1991 deaths Australian academics 20th-century Australian male writers Members of the Order of Australia Fellows of the Australian Academy of the Humanities University of Adelaide alumni Academic staff of the University of Adelaide