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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Constructing a Postcolonial Zone : The Example of Australia
2013
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Stories about Stories : Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth 2013;'In Australia, where the oppression of native peoples and cultures was, if anything, even more severe than in North America, it has been harder to create contact zones, and, as discussed in chapter 5, attempts by white writers such as Patricia Wrightson to blend their traditions with those of indigenous Australians have been met with suspicion or hostility. Non-Aboriginal writers from Australia have generated such a collection of ignorant, patronizing, and demeaning texts about Aborigines that some of the latter want to call a halt to any further attempts. As the novelist Melissa Lucashenko says, "Who asked you to write about Aboriginal people? If it wasn't Aboriginal people themselves, I suggest you go away and look at your own lives instead of ours. We are tired of being the freak show of Australian popular culture" (quoted in Heiss 10). Whereas American writers often treated native cultures as noble, if doomed, and Indian characters as heroic adversaries or guides to the white hero (as in James Fenimore Cooper Leatherstocking series), early depictions of Aboriginal people at best treat them as part of the landscape and at worst—and there is a pretty clear worst in Austyn Granville lost-world romance The Fallen Race (1892)—as subhuman.' (Introduction)
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[Review] The Fire Crystal
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: Eidolon : The Journal of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy , Winter no. 15 1994;
— Review of The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel -
Aghast
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 161 1994; (p. 66)
— Review of The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel -
Other Australias in Realms of the Exotic and Absurd
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 5 November 1994; (p. 11A)
— Review of Twilight Beach 1993 selected work short story ; The Weird Colonial Boy 1993 single work novel ; The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel
-
[Review] The Fire Crystal
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: Eidolon : The Journal of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy , Winter no. 15 1994;
— Review of The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel -
Other Australias in Realms of the Exotic and Absurd
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 5 November 1994; (p. 11A)
— Review of Twilight Beach 1993 selected work short story ; The Weird Colonial Boy 1993 single work novel ; The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel -
Aghast
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 161 1994; (p. 66)
— Review of The Fire Crystal 1994 single work novel -
Constructing a Postcolonial Zone : The Example of Australia
2013
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Stories about Stories : Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth 2013;'In Australia, where the oppression of native peoples and cultures was, if anything, even more severe than in North America, it has been harder to create contact zones, and, as discussed in chapter 5, attempts by white writers such as Patricia Wrightson to blend their traditions with those of indigenous Australians have been met with suspicion or hostility. Non-Aboriginal writers from Australia have generated such a collection of ignorant, patronizing, and demeaning texts about Aborigines that some of the latter want to call a halt to any further attempts. As the novelist Melissa Lucashenko says, "Who asked you to write about Aboriginal people? If it wasn't Aboriginal people themselves, I suggest you go away and look at your own lives instead of ours. We are tired of being the freak show of Australian popular culture" (quoted in Heiss 10). Whereas American writers often treated native cultures as noble, if doomed, and Indian characters as heroic adversaries or guides to the white hero (as in James Fenimore Cooper Leatherstocking series), early depictions of Aboriginal people at best treat them as part of the landscape and at worst—and there is a pretty clear worst in Austyn Granville lost-world romance The Fallen Race (1892)—as subhuman.' (Introduction)
- Whale Beach, Northern Beaches area, Sydney Northeastern Suburbs, Sydney, New South Wales,