Too Far Everywhere: The Romantic Heroine in Nineteenth-century AustraliaThe deliberate exclusion of women's romances resulted in the development of an Australian culture based on a masculine bush ethos. In recovering previously neglected women's texts, Giles argues for a more inclusive and heterogeneous view. |
From inside the book
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Page 3
... identified with the law in Australia , their image cultivated as a domestic corrective to the stereotypical ... identifying this phenomenon I have made use of a term from poetics called enjambement , refering to the missing metrical ...
... identified with the law in Australia , their image cultivated as a domestic corrective to the stereotypical ... identifying this phenomenon I have made use of a term from poetics called enjambement , refering to the missing metrical ...
Page 60
... identification as convict , colonial and fall- en women is ambivalent and unstable , which provides the central study ... identified with the progressive possibili- ties of new settlement , but since her participation is again involun ...
... identification as convict , colonial and fall- en women is ambivalent and unstable , which provides the central study ... identified with the progressive possibili- ties of new settlement , but since her participation is again involun ...
Page 132
... identification is most apparent . Barry Argyle has noted how the heroine is often used in the mas- culine romance ... identified with the law as " God's police . " " " In Tasma's novel these roles for the Australian feminine subject ...
... identification is most apparent . Barry Argyle has noted how the heroine is often used in the mas- culine romance ... identified with the law as " God's police . " " " In Tasma's novel these roles for the Australian feminine subject ...
Contents
Recovering the heroine | 1 |
Colonial Migration | 9 |
Making a New Space | 23 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
1st publ Aboriginal Ada Cambridge Anglo-Australian Anselm Australian Fiction Australian Girl Australian heroine Australian Literary Studies Australian Literature Australian Women Writers Australian Writers Bright and Fiery Broad Arrow bush Cambridge's Catherine Helen Spence Catherine Martin Century characters Clara Morison Colin colonial convict critical cultural difference discourse Elizabeth Elliot England English enjambement Essays European female feminine romance Feminist Fiery Troop gender genre Hadgraft Hergenhan heroine heroine's History of Australian husband Ibid identified interest Lady Bridget Lawson London Maida male marriage Martin masculine Melbourne migrant narrative narrator national-realist nationalist nature Nineteenth Norwell novel Oxford University Press Patty Penance of Portia Penguin political Portia Portia James position Queensland Press realism relationship represent Ringwood romance genre romantic love Rosa Praed sense Shirley Walker sisters social South Australia space Spence's St Lucia Stella story Susan Sheridan Sydney Tasma's Three Miss Kings tion transcendence University of Queensland Victorian writing