The 1930s in Australia was a period marked by rising awareness of and attention to Australia’s ‘half-caste problem’. Released and promoted in tandem with the 1938 sesquicentenary of Australia’s settler colonisation, Xavier Herbert’s novel Capricornia appeared as a searing protest against the exclusion of so-called ‘half-castes’ from white Australia. The novel itself was published by the Publicist Publishing Company, platform for rationalist and businessman W.J. Miles and editor and polemicist P.R. ‘Inky’ Stephensen, both strict advocates of a racially pure white Australia. Yet together, Herbert and his patrons capitalised on the sesquicentenary, and the Day of Mourning protests they helped organise, to promote what they proclaimed the ‘Grea...
Australia’s history parallels the movement of modernity towards neo-colonial enterprises encapsulate...
This essay argues that Australia, while having made some substantive progress in the social and poli...
The Northern Territory of Australia is often described by historians as marginal and anomalous, char...
National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’...
The standard story of Australian national cultural development revolves around a fundamental conflic...
Herbert’s Poor Fellow My Country (1975) anticipated edgy twenty-first century national conversations...
Xavier Herbert published his bestseller Capricornia in 1938, following two periods spent in the Nort...
Xavier Herbert is one of Australia’s outstanding novelists and one of the more controversial. In his...
Written against the background of critical whiteness studies, the article deals with the poetry of ...
Throughout its short history, colonial Australia has suffered from a severe anxiety surrounding its ...
This thesis undertakes a postcolonial reading of a selection of the fiction and non-fiction of Ion I...
Since its publication in 1938 critics have generally read Xavier Herbert’s Capricornia as a national...
This is a narrative paper that tracks a story of Aboriginal representation and the concept of nation...
This paper is an offshoot of a larger project which explored the possibility for the erstwhile settl...
This article reads Patrick White’s 1957 novel Voss as an early example of Neo-Victorian fiction, a r...
Australia’s history parallels the movement of modernity towards neo-colonial enterprises encapsulate...
This essay argues that Australia, while having made some substantive progress in the social and poli...
The Northern Territory of Australia is often described by historians as marginal and anomalous, char...
National belonging for Xavier Herbert was intimately tied to interracial sexuality. ‘Euraustralians’...
The standard story of Australian national cultural development revolves around a fundamental conflic...
Herbert’s Poor Fellow My Country (1975) anticipated edgy twenty-first century national conversations...
Xavier Herbert published his bestseller Capricornia in 1938, following two periods spent in the Nort...
Xavier Herbert is one of Australia’s outstanding novelists and one of the more controversial. In his...
Written against the background of critical whiteness studies, the article deals with the poetry of ...
Throughout its short history, colonial Australia has suffered from a severe anxiety surrounding its ...
This thesis undertakes a postcolonial reading of a selection of the fiction and non-fiction of Ion I...
Since its publication in 1938 critics have generally read Xavier Herbert’s Capricornia as a national...
This is a narrative paper that tracks a story of Aboriginal representation and the concept of nation...
This paper is an offshoot of a larger project which explored the possibility for the erstwhile settl...
This article reads Patrick White’s 1957 novel Voss as an early example of Neo-Victorian fiction, a r...
Australia’s history parallels the movement of modernity towards neo-colonial enterprises encapsulate...
This essay argues that Australia, while having made some substantive progress in the social and poli...
The Northern Territory of Australia is often described by historians as marginal and anomalous, char...