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https://hdl.handle.net/2440/61091
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Type: | Journal article |
Title: | 'Writing from the Fringe of Empire': understanding the gaps, silences and underlying whiteness in Jane Sarah Doudy's literary works |
Author: | Hancock, J. |
Citation: | Women's History Review, 2010; 19(3):435-450 |
Publisher: | Triangle Journals Ltd |
Issue Date: | 2010 |
ISSN: | 0961-2025 1747-583X |
Statement of Responsibility: | Janette Hancock |
Abstract: | Jane Sarah Doudy was a writer who often wrote to project an image of an ideal colonial community. Embedded within this literary construction were very clear ideas about cultural norms, colonial patriotism and racial hierarchies. Her literary works, however, have been shelved and forgotten for the better part of seventy-five years. They have been revisited here to provide a fresh new site for acknowledging the political, cultural and historical significance of white settler women's narratives and for understanding how one woman's 'dialogue of domination' reveals much about the complex interracial boundaries and relationships that often occurred on the fringes of empire. |
Rights: | © 2010 Taylor & Francis |
DOI: | 10.1080/09612025.2010.489351 |
Published version: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2010.489351 |
Appears in Collections: | Aurora harvest Gender Studies and Social Analysis publications |
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