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      Chapter

      The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction
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      Chapter

      The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction

      DOI link for The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction

      The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction book

      The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction

      DOI link for The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction

      The ‘Australian Girl' and the Domestic Ideal in Colonial Women’s Fiction book

      ByMichelle J. Smith
      BookDomestic Fiction in Colonial Australia and New Zealand

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2014
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 16
      eBook ISBN 9781315653884
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      ABSTRACT

      This chapter considers how An Australian Heroine and three other domestic novels by Australian women writers represent the conflict between the Australian Girl figure and the domestic ideal. The majority of girls' novels and periodicals read by Australian girls throughout the nineteenth century were written and published in Britain. Daughters of the Southern Cross were more likely to have access to the Girl's Own Paper by subscription or to imported fictions that were popular with British girl readers than to locally produced depictions of girlhood. Australian colonial domestic fiction exhibits greater contradiction between the situation of the Australian Girl and the domestic expectations placed upon her, than is imagined in 'A Daughter of Greater Britain' and British girls' novels of the period. In Domesticity, Imperialism and Emigration in the Victorian Novel, Diana Archibald contends that British novels demonstrate the uneasy relationship between domesticity and imperialism.

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