Literature, Mythmaking and National Identity: the Case for Seven Little Australians

Authors

  • Sharyn Pearce

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl1997vol7no3art1382

Keywords:

national culture, Australian culture, nationalism, national characteristics, Ethel Turner, gender role, Seven Little Australians

Abstract

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References

Dutton, Geoffrey (1984) Snow on the Saltbush: The Australian Literary Experience. London, Viking.

Garth, John (1908) 'The real Australian girl', Australian Magazine 8, 11, 1006-1009.

Haverfield, E. L. (1908) Queensland Cousins. London, Nelson.

Poole, Philippa (ed) (1980) The Diaries of Ethel Turner. Sydney, Lansdowne.

Lake, Marilyn (1986) 'The politics of respectability: identifying the masculinist context', Historical Studies, 22, 86, 116-131.

Sheridan, Susan (1995) Along the Faultlines: Sex, Race and Nation in Australian Women's Writing 1880s-1930s. Sydney, Allen and Unwin.

Turner, Ethel (1894) Seven Little Australians. London, Ward Lock.

Watkins, Tony (1992) 'Cultural studies, new historicism and children's literature', in Peter Hunt (ed) Literature for Children: Contemporary Criticism. London, Routledge, pp. 173-195.

White, Kerry (1988) 'Blooming with childhood's fragrance: sweet words and tough times for women writers in the 1890s', Australian Feminist Studies, 7&8, 49-63.

White, Kerry (1993) 'The real Australian girl?: some post-Federation writers for girls', in Kay Ferres (ed) The Time to Write: Australian Women Writers 1890 - 1930. Ringwood, Vic., Penguin, pp. 73-87.

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Published

1997-12-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Literature, Mythmaking and National Identity: the Case for Seven Little Australians” (1997) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 7(3), pp. 10–16. doi:10.21153/pecl1997vol7no3art1382.

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