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AbstractHistoryArchive Description
'How did the early European settlers talk to their children about Australia’s unique and unfamiliar landscape? What types of stories and images did they create to characterise and make sense of its strange fauna and flora? As a natural history illustrator, writer and avid reader I wanted to explore how the Australian environment, filled with new and unfamiliar species, was characterised in text and illustrations in children’s books in the 19th century and into the 20th century. ‘From curious creatures to bushland beasts: a graphic novel exploring representations of Australian fauna and flora in early Australian children’s book publishing’ was the title I proposed for my Children’s Literature Fellowship, undertaken at State Library Victoria in 2016–17. My aim was to view a selection of Australian children’s books, to discover how Australian fauna and flora were portrayed in both text and illustrations, and then to develop a creative response in the form of a graphic novel. My research method was to be autoethnographic: I would note and sketch my responses to the works I viewed.'
(Introduction)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 16 Apr 2020 11:32:11
88-95
Curious Creatures and Bushland Beasts : Inspiration from the Children’s Book Collection
The La Trobe Journal
Subjects:
- Australian Fairy Tales 1897 selected work children's fiction
- My Childhood in Australia : A Story for My Children 1892 single work autobiography
- Bushland Stories 1910 selected work children's fiction
- Timothy in Bushland 1912 single work children's fiction
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