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Issue Details: First known date: 1996... 1996 The Function of 'the tragic' in Henry Reynolds' Narratives of Conflict History
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'This paper discusses the ways in which ideas of 'the tragic' function in recent narratives of contact history in Australia. 'Contact history' is used here to refer to first and second generation contact between Aboriginal people and the European invaders in Australia in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and I shall be primarily concerned with those historical narratives which attempt to 're-write' history to include Aboriginal responses during this period. Within Australian historiography this project is said to have commenced in the 1970s, prompted by wider events in the Australian community such as the Aboriginal land rights movement (Curthoys 1983, 99). One of the best-known contributors to this project of inclusion has been Henry Reynolds, now the author of eight books dedicated to it. I shall be examining two of Reynolds' most recent contributions to this area: With the White People (1990) and The Fate ofa Free People (1995). At the same time that Reynolds and other professional historians have engaged in this project., there has been an increasing body of work by Aboriginal writers - much of it classified as fiction rather than academic historiography - examining these same themes of initial contact and resistance to invasion. In order to clarify some of my argument.s about. t.he function of the tragic mode in Reynolds' work, I shall also discuss a recently published short story by the Aboriginal writer, Gerry Bostock.' (Introduction)

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    y separately published work icon Queensland Review vol. 3 no. 1 April 1996 Z1094575 1996 periodical issue 'Queensland Review enters its third year at a time when Australians might well wonder, with one of Janette Turner Hospital's characters, a southern journalist, 'Does Queensland actually exist?' Certainly its identity of late, both politically and climatically, has been remarkably mobile: drought has been followed by floods, and the Labor government until recently hailed as the most popular in Australia has given way to a Coalition government after a by-election in little-known Mundingburra placed the destiny of the state in the hands of an Independent from Gladstone. But if Queensland had not existed, then somebody - perhaps the Federal Coalition - would surely have insisted on inventing it; for within a month of the change of guard in Queensland, the ALP lost again, this time with a bang rather than a whimper. An analysis of these particular events must await future editions of Queensland Review. This issue focuses on traditions and circumstances which have shaped Queensland's difference: in particular the political, social and cultural environment of early Queensland; relationships between Europeans and Aborigines; and the social impact of World War II. The strong regional emphasis apparent throughout reflects the decentralisation which characterises Queensland's population, economy and culture; such research on regional diversity promises to enrich Queensland and Australian studies.' (Editorial) 1996 pg. 62-72
Last amended 31 Jul 2019 12:30:48
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