Ethel Turner and the ‘Voices of Dissent’: Masculinities and Fatherhood in The Cub and Captain Cub

Authors

  • Claudia Nelson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2003vol13no1art1292

Keywords:

masculinity, fatherhood, gender roles, Ethel Turner, The Cub, Captain Cub

Abstract

In his interesting study 'Making the Australian Male: Middle-Class Masculinity 1870-1920', Martin Crotty argues that turn-of-the-century Australians firmly rejected the androgynous, domesticated gender role that both children's fiction and the public schools had offered Australian boys in the 1870s... Work such as Crotty's should help to inspire any number of reexaminations of the masculine gender role in texts that sought to acculturate young readers before, during, and after the Great War.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Clinch, Eileen (1899, 15 July) ‘A soldier’s daughter’, in Australian Young Folks: An Illustrated Monthly for Australian Homes, n.s. 2: 7, 2.

Clinch, Eileen (1901, 15 January) ‘A Christmas spirit’, in Australian Young Folks: An Illustrated Monthly for Australian Homes, n.s. 4: 1, 2.

Crotty, Martin (2001) Making the Australian Male: Middle-Class Masculinity 1870- 1920. Melbourne, Melbourne University Press.

Foster, John, Ern Finnis, and Maureen Nimon (1995) Australian Children’s Literature: An Exploration of Genre and Theme. Wagga Wagga, Charles Sturt University.

‘Jim Gascoigne’, by ‘Talking Oak’ (1890), serialized in Parthenon, 2.

Lake, Marilyn (1986) ‘The politics of respectability: Identifying the masculinist context’, in Australian Historical Studies 22: 116-131.

Lake, Marilyn (1992) ‘Mission impossible: How men gave birth to the Australian nation— nationalism, gender and other seminal acts’, in Gender and History 4, 3: 305-322.

Lake, Marilyn (1993) ‘A revolution in the family: The challenge and contradictions of maternal citizenship in Australia’, in S. Koven & S. Michel (eds) Mothers of a New World: Maternalist Politics and the Origins of Welfare States. New York, Routledge, pp.378-395.

Mack, Louise (1913) The Marriage of Edward. London, Mills and Boon.

Nelson, Claudia (1998) ‘David and Jonathan— and Saul—revisited: Homodomestic patterns in British boys’ magazine fiction, 1880-1915’, in Children’s Literature Association Quarterly 23, 3: 120-27.

Niall, Brenda (1979) Seven Little Billabongs: The World of Ethel Turner and Mary Grant Bruce. Melbourne, Melbourne University Press.

Niall, Brenda, assisted by Frances O’Neill (1984)

Australia through the Looking-Glass: Children’s Fiction 1830-1980. Carlton, Melbourne University Press.

‘The Nipper’, by ‘Nenoli’ (1898, 31 January), in Australian Young Folks: An Illustrated Monthly for Australian Homes, n.s. 1,1: 6.

Rossiter, Richard (1996) ‘The return of Judy: Repression in Ethel Turner’s fiction’, in C. Bradford (ed) Writing the Australian Child: Texts and Contexts in Fictions for Children. Perth, University of Western Australia Press, pp.55-75.

Saxby, H. M. (1969) A History of Australian Children’s Literature 1841-1941. Sydney, Wentworth.

Scutter, Heather (1993) ‘Back to Back to Billabong’, in M. Stone, (ed) Australian Children’s Literature: Finding a Voice. Wollongong, University of Wollongong, pp.18-26.

Swain, Shurlee, Ellen Warne, and Margot Hillel (2003, forthcoming) ‘Ignorance is not innocence: Sex education in Australia, 1890-1939’, in C. Nelson and M. H. Martin, (eds) Sexual Pedagogies: Sex Education in Britain, Australia, and America, 1879-2000. New York, Palgrave.

Turner, Ethel (1915) The Cub: Six Months in His Life. Melbourne, Ward, Lock.

Turner, Ethel (1917) Captain Cub. Melbourne, Ward Lock.

Turner, Lilian (1908) Paradise and the Perrys. London, Ward Lock.

Wighton, Rosemary (1963) Early Australian Children’s Literature. Melbourne, Lansdowne.

Downloads

Published

2003-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Ethel Turner and the ‘Voices of Dissent’: Masculinities and Fatherhood in The Cub and Captain Cub” (2003) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 13(1), pp. 4–10. doi:10.21153/pecl2003vol13no1art1292.