In 1894, a young South Australian teacher named Elsie Birks travelled from metropolitan Adelaide to the margins of the Riverland with her family to establish a utopian socialist settlement. From 1894 to 1897 she kept diaries of her life in Murtho, and wrote numerous letters to friends and family—colourful observations of her community, and how constituted itself and its place. Here I present an analysis of these documents, and other letters penned in 1945 that record her reflections on this earlier time. I map the colonial visions of Elsie Birks, and do this by exploring the terrain on which the Murtho experiment took place, outlining the trajectory of the village settlement movement in general and Murtho in particular. I then draw connect...
© 2021 Jessie Catherine WebbThis creative writing project explores questions of belonging and place ...
© 2010 Dr. Fiona Lee DavisThis thesis presents the New South Wales Aboriginal station, Cummeragunja,...
This thesis investigates how four contemporary Australian novels, Peter Carey’s Oscar and Lucinda, J...
In 1894, a young South Australian teacher named Elsie Birks travelled from metropolitan Adelaide to ...
Alan Lester and Elleke Boehmer have both written on imperial networks, but what happens when our cas...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. A...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Who does not think of masculinity and the Australian national character when they hear the word ‘mat...
In the winter of 1879 a riot broke out at the New Norfolk Hospital for the Insane in Tasmania. The f...
The formative years of middle and upper class British women who wrote about colonial life have been,...
In the early decades of the twentieth century, a number of young Aboriginal women, of mixed descent,...
During the 1970s and 1980s, a number of predominantly white, working- and middle-class women from ac...
The topic which I have chosen to research - 'Women and Domesticity' focusing on the sub-culture of r...
The central preoccupation of my study is the following : how far do the rural tourism characteristic...
The central preoccupation of my study is the following : how far do the rural tourism characteristic...
© 2021 Jessie Catherine WebbThis creative writing project explores questions of belonging and place ...
© 2010 Dr. Fiona Lee DavisThis thesis presents the New South Wales Aboriginal station, Cummeragunja,...
This thesis investigates how four contemporary Australian novels, Peter Carey’s Oscar and Lucinda, J...
In 1894, a young South Australian teacher named Elsie Birks travelled from metropolitan Adelaide to ...
Alan Lester and Elleke Boehmer have both written on imperial networks, but what happens when our cas...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. A...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Who does not think of masculinity and the Australian national character when they hear the word ‘mat...
In the winter of 1879 a riot broke out at the New Norfolk Hospital for the Insane in Tasmania. The f...
The formative years of middle and upper class British women who wrote about colonial life have been,...
In the early decades of the twentieth century, a number of young Aboriginal women, of mixed descent,...
During the 1970s and 1980s, a number of predominantly white, working- and middle-class women from ac...
The topic which I have chosen to research - 'Women and Domesticity' focusing on the sub-culture of r...
The central preoccupation of my study is the following : how far do the rural tourism characteristic...
The central preoccupation of my study is the following : how far do the rural tourism characteristic...
© 2021 Jessie Catherine WebbThis creative writing project explores questions of belonging and place ...
© 2010 Dr. Fiona Lee DavisThis thesis presents the New South Wales Aboriginal station, Cummeragunja,...
This thesis investigates how four contemporary Australian novels, Peter Carey’s Oscar and Lucinda, J...