WRITING THE COLONIAL ADVENTURE WRITING THE COLONIAL ADVENTURE Race, Gender and Nation in Anglo-Australian Popular Fiction, 1875-1914 Robert Dixon Department of Humanities University of Southern Queensland �CAMBRIDGE � UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGEU NIVERSITPYR ESS CambridgNee,wY orkM,e lbournMea,d riCda,p eT ownS,i ngapoSraeoP, a ulDoe,l hi CambridUgnei versPirteys s TheE dinburBguhi ldiCnagm,b ridCgBe2 8RU,U K Publisihnet dh eU niteSdt atoefsA mericbayC ambridge UniPvreerssNsie,tw yY ork www.acmbridge.org Informatointo hni tsi tlwew:w .cambridge.org/9780521484398 ©CambridUgnei versPirteys1 s9 95 Thipsu blicaitsii oncn o pyrigShutb.j etcots tatuteoxrcye ption andt ot hep rovisioofnrse levcaonltl ecltiicveen saignrge ements, nor eproducotfia onnyp armta yt akpel acwei thotuhtew ritten permissoifCo anm bridUgnei versPirteys s. Firsptu blis1h9e9d5 Re-issiunet dh idsi gitaplrliyn tveedr si2o0n0 9 A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library National Library of Australia Cataloguing in Publication data DixonR,o ber(tR obeWritl lia1m9)5,4 -. Writitnhgec olonaidavle nturraec:eg ,e ndearn dn atiionn Anglo-Austrpaolpiualna r f1i8c7ti5o-n1,9 14. Bibliography. Includiensd ex. I. Adventusrteo riEensg,l i-sHhi stoarnyd c riticism. 2.A dventusrteo riAeuss,t ral-iHains toarnyd c riticism. 3.C oloniienls i tera4t.uIr mep.e rialiinls imt erature. 5.S exr olien l itera6t. uRraec.ea wareneisnls i terature. 7.N ationaliinls imt eraIt.uT riet.l e. 823.08709 Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data DixonR,o ber1t9,5 4- Writitnhgec olonial adventguerned:ea rnr dna actei,io nnA nglo Australpioapnu lfiacrt io1n8,7 5-191/R4o.b erDti xon. p. cm. Includbeisb liograrpehfeirceanlc (eps. )a ndi ndex. I. Adventusrteo riEensg,l i-sHhi stoarnydc ritic2i.sP mo.p ular litera-tGurreea Btr ita-iHni stoarnydc ritic3i.sE mn.g lish fictio-n1 9tche ntu-rHyi stoarnydc ritic4i.sE mn.g lish ficti-o2n0 tche ntu-rHyi stoarnydc ritic5i.sA md.v entusrteo ries, Austral-iHains toarnydc ritic6i. sMma.s culin(iPtsyy choliong y) litera7t.uIr mep.e rialiins ml iter8a.Nt autrieo.n aliins m litera9t.uC roel.o niiens literI 0at.Su erxre o.l ien literature. 11.R acei n literIa.Tt iutrlee.. PR830.A38D15989 5 823.08709-dc20 95-2052 ISBN9 78-0-521-48h1a9r0d-b8a ck ISBN9 78-0-521-48p4a3p9e-r8b ack Coveirl lustrcaotvieoornf :T h e Lost Explorers byA lexandMearc donald. PublisbhyeB dl ackained S onL,o ndon1,9 07E.v ereyf fohratsb een madet ot racteh eo rigisnoaulr coeft hiisl lustrTahteip ounb.l ishers woulbde p leasteodh eafrro m thec opyrihgohltd er. For Alex and Lizzy Contents List of Illustrations viii Acknowledgements ix Introduction 1 1 The Romance of Property: RolfBoldrewood and Walter Scott 15 2 Outlaws and Lawmakers: Boldrewood, Praed and the ethics of adventure 30 3 Israel in Egypt: The significance of Australian captivity narratives 45 4 Imperial Romance: King Sowmon 's Mines and Australian romance 62 5 The New Woman and the Coming Man: Gender and genre in the 'lost-race' romance 82 6 The Other World: Rosa Praed's occult fiction 100 7 The Boundaries of Civility: Australia, Asia and the Pacific 118 8 Imagined Invasions: The Lone Hand and narratives of Asiatic invasion 135 9 The Colonial City: Crime fiction and empire 155 10 Beyond Adventure: Louis Becke 179 Conclusion 197 Notes 203 Select Bibliography 215 Index 224 vii Illustrations 1 Cover of The Lost Explorers 73 2 'Emu Bill gently pillowed his dying comrade's head upon his knee , 77 3 "'Now, let 'em have it," the Hatter exclaimed, as he fired as fast as he could use his repeater' 87 4 '"And now for you!", she cried, as she stepped over him where he lay' 90 5 Cover of The Island Traders 122 6 Cover of The Pearl Divers of &ncador Reef 132 7 'The Unfinished Commonwealth', cover of the Lone Hand 134 8 'Defence', cover of the Lone Hand 138 9 'Mort's Dock as it Must Be', Lionel Lindsay's illustration in the Lone Hand 142 10 'There is no help for it ...W e must fight our way out' 167 11 Portrait of Dr Nikola 170 12 'We set off, I running beside him' 174 13 'Two of them were carrying Miss Chesson' 194 viii Acknowledgements I began work on Writing the Colonial Adventure shortly after moving to Townsville in 1984 and finished preparing the manuscript shortly after moving to Toowoomba in 1994. The bulk of the writing was done during two study leaves in 1989 and 1993. My first debt of gratitude is therefore to the English Department, James Cook University, and the Faculty of Arts, University of Southern Queensland, for giving me financial assist ance, technical support and the time to write. During the course of the project I have received help from many generous colleagues in the form of information, editorial advice and research assistance. I am particularly fortunate to have had such skilled, stimulating and patient readers of work in progress as Philippa Kelly, Tony Hassall, Elizabeth Perkins, Betty Holt, Gina Mercer, Sylvia Kelso, Graeme Turner, Elizabeth Wehby, Kay Ferres, Greg Manning, Francis de Groen, Laurie Hergenhan, Delys Bird and Heather Jamieson. Patrick Morgan, Alan Brissenden, Cheryl Taylor, Richard Fotheringham, Elizabeth Morrison, Paul Turnbull and the late Barry Andrews freely shared the hard-won fruits of their own research. Parts of chapters 3 and 5 were originally aired at conferences of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, and I am grateful to many ASAL colleagues for their comments and support. My work was not only facilitated, but positively inspired, by the fine collection of nineteenth and early twentieth century Anglo-Australian books held by the James Cook University Library. I also wish to acknowledge the assistance of the staff of the Mitchell Library, the National Library, the La Trobe Library, the Fryer Library, the British Library and the Sheffield City Library. Kay Cameron, Jillian Bond and Susan Warbrick have given expert secretarial and technical support. Finally, I am grateful to Melpomene Kapodistria for sharing the many hours of anxiety without ix x ACKNOWLDEGEMENTS which wntmg cannot be produced. This book is dedicated to our daughters, Alexandra and Elizabeth Dixon. Part of Chapter 3 was published as 'Rolf Boldrewood' s War to the Knife. Narrative form and ideology in the historical novel', Australian Literary Studies 12.3 (May 1986). An early version of Chapter 5 appeared as 'The New Woman and the Coming Man: Gender and genre in the "lost-race" romance', in Susan Margarey, Sue Rowley and Susan Sheridan, eds, Debutante Nation: feminism contests the 1890s (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1993). Versions of Chapter 7 appeared as 'The Boundaries of Civility: Colonial Discourse in Popular Fiction of the First Commonwealth Decade' in Elizabeth Wehby and Margaret Harris, eds, Reconnoitres: Essays on Australian Literature in Honour of G.A. Wilkes (Melbourne: Oxford UP I Sydney UP, 1992); and 'The Unfinished Commonwealth: Boundaries of civility in popular Australian fiction of the first commonwealth decade' in Chris Tiffin and Alan Lawson, eds, De-scribing Empire: Post-colonialism and textuality (London: Routledge, 1994). Part of Chapter 9 originally appeared in 'Closing the Can of Worms: Enactments ofJ ustice' in B/,eak House, The Mystery of a Hansom Cab and The Tax Inspector, Westerly 37.4 (Summer 1992). Permission to reproduce images copyright of the estate of Lionel Lindsay kindly granted by Peter Lindsay.
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