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Issue Details: First known date: 2018... 2018 The Blackaby Road (an Excerpt from the Long Story, The House on Legs)
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Notes

  • Author's note: The recent establishment of the Australian Fairy Tale Society and the publication of Griffith Review’s ‘Once upon a time in Oz’ fairy-tale edition (2013), are high points in a groundswell of interest in issues surrounding the adoption and repurposing of European fairy tales in an Australian, post-colonial context. My creative work follows that of Carmel Bird, whose works experiment with the blending of fragmented European fairy tales and the dark side of Australian history.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series Into the Bush : Australasian Fairy Tales no. 43 2018 12939535 2018 periodical issue

    'At the turn of the last century, writers like Atha Westbury and Hume Cook were asking whether Australia had its own fairies, its own fairy tale lore. They attempted to fill the perceived lack of traditional fairy-tale narratives with their own published works of fairy tale. The titles authors chose for their collections – for instance, Olga Ernst’s Fairy tales from the land of the wattle and Annette Kellermann’s Fairy tales of the south seas and other stories – often revealed an overt wish to build a fairy-tale tradition that was distinctly and uniquely Australian. While some of these tales simply relocated existing European tales to the Australian context, most used classic fairy-tale tropes and themes to create new adventures. Other writers and collectors, like K Langloh-Parker, Sister Agnes and Andrew Lang, sought to present Indigenous tales as examples of local folk and fairy tales – a project of flawed good intentions grounded in colonial appropriation. These early Australian publications are largely forgotten and, in many ways, the erasure or forgetting of narratives that were often infused with colonial attitudes to gender, class, race, is far from regrettable. And yet there was a burgeoning local tradition of magical storytelling spearheaded by the delicate fairies of Ida Rentoul Outhwaite’s brush and the gumnut babies of May Gibbs that celebrated the Australian environment, its flora and fauna, populating and decorating new tales for the nation’s children.' (Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario, Nike Sulway and Belinda Calderone : Introduction)

    2018
Last amended 22 Feb 2018 09:16:59
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