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Issue Details: First known date: 2005... 2005 The Wheatbelt in Contemporary Rural Mythology
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Urban mythologies of rural places and rural Ideologies of agrarianism and countrymindedness have historically contributed to Australian cultural images of the stoic rural battler and idyllic visions of rural life. Rural places are of declining cultural significance in Australia and are ambivalently positioned in contemporary mythologies between the romance of the battler and contemporary dystopia of environmental degradation, and social and economic crises.

This paper discusses the changing role of the wheatbelt region in Western Australian mythology. Mythologies are understood both as untruths and as naturalised ideologies. It reports the results of interviews with Western Australians who were asked the question 'What do you think is the place of the wheatbelt in Western Australian mythology?', with mythology explained as 'the stories we tell each other about what it means lo be Western Australian'. The responses indicate that the romantic battler is no longer current in Western Australian mythologies, that the wheatbelt is almost absent from contemporary Western Australian culture, and that the wheatlbelt is increasingly associated with negative images of environmental destruction, social decay and economic decline.' (Author's abstract)

Notes

  • The region discussed in this paper includes the area in which A. B. Facey lived and worked and which is the setting for part of Facey's autobiography A Fortunate Life.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Rural Society vol. 15 no. 2 2005 8236563 2005 periodical issue 2005 pg. 176-190
    Note: Available online via Informit's Australian Public Affairs Full Text database.
Last amended 15 Jan 2015 09:37:18
176-190 The Wheatbelt in Contemporary Rural Mythologysmall AustLit logo Rural Society
Subjects:
  • Wheatbelt Region, Western Australia,
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