Australia features in numerous Victorian novels either as a place of exile or a land of new opportunities, perhaps the most memorable image of the country having been presented in Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations (1861). Anthony Trollope’s writing, however, offers a much more extensive and complex presentation of Australian life as seen by a Victorian English gentleman. In his Australian fictions, including Harry Heathcote of Gangoil (1874), Catherine Carmichael (1878), and John Caldigate (1879), he presents Australia both as a land of new opportunities and as a place where social hierarchy as it is known in England is upturned and social boundaries either disregarded or drawn along different lines. The present article is concerned wit...
Great Expectations is a masterpiece by Charles Dickens, which portrays expectations for different ch...
<p>This dissertation argues that the literary, intellectual, and cultural borders of Victorian Brita...
By the close of the nineteenth century, Australian writers and critics generally agreed that 'the wr...
Australia features in numerous Victorian novels either as a place of exile or a land of new opportun...
Australia features in numerous Victorian novels either as a place of exile or a land of new opportun...
The following article concentrates on the representation of social class in Anthony Trollope’s Antip...
My dissertation examines the historical, social, and political relationship between Great Britain an...
Over the course of the nineteenth century a remarkable array of types appeared – and disappeared – i...
Over the course of the 19th century a remarkable array of types appeared in Australian literature: t...
This chapter considers ways in which the Australian novel emerged in the early nineteenth century th...
Between nineteen-twenty and the present day Australian novelists have, in the settings of their work...
This thesis investigates nineteenth-century Australia as a frequently disregarded site of colonial d...
This dissertation examines the fiction and non-fiction that Anthony Trollope wrote in between his re...
The question of place has always been central to Australian fiction, both as a thematic element, but...
Postcolonial theory teaches us that the Empire was as much a textual as a physical undertaking: the...
Great Expectations is a masterpiece by Charles Dickens, which portrays expectations for different ch...
<p>This dissertation argues that the literary, intellectual, and cultural borders of Victorian Brita...
By the close of the nineteenth century, Australian writers and critics generally agreed that 'the wr...
Australia features in numerous Victorian novels either as a place of exile or a land of new opportun...
Australia features in numerous Victorian novels either as a place of exile or a land of new opportun...
The following article concentrates on the representation of social class in Anthony Trollope’s Antip...
My dissertation examines the historical, social, and political relationship between Great Britain an...
Over the course of the nineteenth century a remarkable array of types appeared – and disappeared – i...
Over the course of the 19th century a remarkable array of types appeared in Australian literature: t...
This chapter considers ways in which the Australian novel emerged in the early nineteenth century th...
Between nineteen-twenty and the present day Australian novelists have, in the settings of their work...
This thesis investigates nineteenth-century Australia as a frequently disregarded site of colonial d...
This dissertation examines the fiction and non-fiction that Anthony Trollope wrote in between his re...
The question of place has always been central to Australian fiction, both as a thematic element, but...
Postcolonial theory teaches us that the Empire was as much a textual as a physical undertaking: the...
Great Expectations is a masterpiece by Charles Dickens, which portrays expectations for different ch...
<p>This dissertation argues that the literary, intellectual, and cultural borders of Victorian Brita...
By the close of the nineteenth century, Australian writers and critics generally agreed that 'the wr...