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The Church of the Glass of Water single work   short story  
Issue Details: First known date: 1867... 1867 The Church of the Glass of Water
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

Set in a small Spanish village in 1845, a parish priest feeds a wounded man and binds his wounds. The man is captured the next day by soldiers but entrusts his wife and children to the priest. The wife is dead but the priest rears the children until, 12 years later, they are reclaimed and he is rewarded. (PB)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon The Australian Journal vol. 3 no. 115 9 November 1867 Z1059672 1867 periodical issue 1867 pg. 166-168

Works about this Work

From Hagiography to Personal Pain : Stories of Australian Foster Care from the Nineteenth Century to the Twenty-First Dee Mitchell , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Adoption and Culture , vol. 5 no. 2017; (p. 89-109)

'Stories—fictional, biographical, and autobiographical—are one way in which we can imagine what it has been like to experience foster care in Australia. In this paper I look at the trends in stories told about foster care from the nineteenth century, across the twentieth, and into the early twenty-first century. While exploring these trends, I make some observations about the shift from fictional accounts where foster parents and foster children were heroic characters to often searing tales of hurt and trauma inflicted on children in foster care by violent women and men.'

Source: Abstract.

From Hagiography to Personal Pain : Stories of Australian Foster Care from the Nineteenth Century to the Twenty-First Dee Mitchell , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Adoption and Culture , vol. 5 no. 2017; (p. 89-109)

'Stories—fictional, biographical, and autobiographical—are one way in which we can imagine what it has been like to experience foster care in Australia. In this paper I look at the trends in stories told about foster care from the nineteenth century, across the twentieth, and into the early twenty-first century. While exploring these trends, I make some observations about the shift from fictional accounts where foster parents and foster children were heroic characters to often searing tales of hurt and trauma inflicted on children in foster care by violent women and men.'

Source: Abstract.

Last amended 4 Aug 2004 11:46:57
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    Spain,
    c
    Western Europe, Europe,
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