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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Settler Colonial Fictions : Beyond Nationalism and Universalism
2023
single work
criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel 2023; (p. 54-68)'Paradoxically, Australian nationalist accounts have tended to slight the earliest Australian literature by white settlers from the nineteenth century. This chapter surveys the literary history of this period, examining writers such as Oliné Keese, Ada Cambridge, Henry Kingsley, Rosa Praed, and Catherine Helen Spence. Drawing connections between these writers and the transnational Anglophone literary world centering on Great Britain and the United States, this chapter takes a comparative perspective that at once acknowledges the peripheral standing of these Australian texts and argues for their relevance to the history of the novel in English.' (Publication abstract)
- y 'Mater Dear' as Monster or Angel? : The Ideology of Motherhood in the Fiction of Ada Cambridge 1991 Z535853 1991 single work thesis
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Publications Received
1898
single work
review
— Appears in: The Brisbane Courier , 20 August 1898; (p. 4)
— Review of Materfamilias 1898 single work novel ; Dead Men's Tales 1898 selected work short story -
Literature
1898
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Mail , 30 July vol. 66 no. 1985 1898; (p. 258)
— Review of Materfamilias 1898 single work novel '...an admirable study in feminity'.
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Literature
1898
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Mail , 30 July vol. 66 no. 1985 1898; (p. 258)
— Review of Materfamilias 1898 single work novel '...an admirable study in feminity'. -
Publications Received
1898
single work
review
— Appears in: The Brisbane Courier , 20 August 1898; (p. 4)
— Review of Materfamilias 1898 single work novel ; Dead Men's Tales 1898 selected work short story - y 'Mater Dear' as Monster or Angel? : The Ideology of Motherhood in the Fiction of Ada Cambridge 1991 Z535853 1991 single work thesis
-
Settler Colonial Fictions : Beyond Nationalism and Universalism
2023
single work
criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel 2023; (p. 54-68)'Paradoxically, Australian nationalist accounts have tended to slight the earliest Australian literature by white settlers from the nineteenth century. This chapter surveys the literary history of this period, examining writers such as Oliné Keese, Ada Cambridge, Henry Kingsley, Rosa Praed, and Catherine Helen Spence. Drawing connections between these writers and the transnational Anglophone literary world centering on Great Britain and the United States, this chapter takes a comparative perspective that at once acknowledges the peripheral standing of these Australian texts and argues for their relevance to the history of the novel in English.' (Publication abstract)