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'The outpouring of national sentiment as the colonies moved towards Federation heralded a quest for the ‘Australianising’ of children’s books: fairy tales were no exception. European fairy folk were placed in, or perhaps transported to, bush settings as authors re-imagined the ways in which the emigrant old-world creatures could claim a place in the Australian environment. This paper explores efforts of the early writers to locate an Australian fairyland in the ‘bush’ and contribute to the transmission of national identity.' (Publication abstract)
Notes
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Epigraph: And why not fairies in Australia? Why should not our innumerable ferny glades, romantic valleys, mountainous passes, and lonesome glens, be peopled with fays and elves? Why should not Robin Goodfellow be found sitting jauntily astride the gorgeous waratah, or chasing the laughing jackass from its favourite bough? But all in good time. In the generations yet to come, unless the State schools make the little ones too learned, we shall have Australian fairy tales, stories in which goblin, kangaroos and emus, graceful sprites, and bearded magicians, will be found on every Fairyland in Australia. (‘Fairyland in Australia’ 1880: 3)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
- Rosalie's Reward, or, The Fairy Treasure 1870 single work children's fiction
- 'Mr. Bunyip', or, Mary Somerville's Ramble : A Story for Children 1871 single work children's fiction
- Australian Fairy Tales 1897 single work review
- Australian Wonderland : A Fairy Chain 1899 single work children's fiction
- Dot and the Kangaroo 1899 single work children's fiction
- The Spirit of the Bush Fire and Other Australian Fairy Tales 1898 selected work children's fiction