Australian Women Writers Gen 2 Week 13-19 Jan. 2019

Australian Women Writers, Gen 2 (1890-1918)
The second generation of Australian writing, as I see it, covers the period 1890 to 1918. HM Green, who as I discussed earlier, divides my Gen 1 into two periods, 1788-1850 and 1850-1890, heads his account of this period Third Period 1890-1923, “Self-conscious Nationalism”.
In Australia the spirit of the nineties and early nineteen-hundreds… took the form, in the literary as in the social and political worlds, of a fervent democratic nationalism: it was based upon a broad social consciousness, a feeling of mutual relationship, that found its most characteristic expression in Lawson’s doctrine of mateship.
The writing, dominated by the influence of the Sydney Bulletin, could be called Bush Realism, an intense effort to portray Bush life in all its details, paralleled in the art world by Australia’s contribution to Impressionism, the Heidelberg School. This is a very fertile period for discussion with women’s suffrage, Federation, the anti-conscription movement, the Great War.
Men’s nationalistic writing in this period, led by the Bulletin, gave rise to the dominant myths of Australianness, forming the baseline for all subsequent discussions of Australian writing. The Australian Legend or the Lone Hand, men on their own in and against the Bush is the generally accepted theme of this period, but we have already seen that bush-women were equally alone, facing the extra hardships of childbearing and child rearing, not to mention predatory men. There is also a further myth that began in this period, although it wasn’t generally recognized until the 1930s, and that was the myth of the Pioneers, men and women working together to carve out a space for themselves from virgin country (and it is only recently that we have begun contesting that “virgin”). Miles Franklin believed that she (under her own name and as Brent of Bin Bin) and Steele Rudd were the founding writers of this myth.
In the subsequent, post WWI period, women writers focused on social realism, often in an urban setting, and I have used this to distinguish Gen 2 writers from Gen 3. In particular, I place Miles Franklin (1879-1954) in Gen 2 and Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883-1969) in Gen 3.
Below I have listed firstly, all the women (in birth date order) and their works – poetry, novels, letters, journals – which have been republished or for which I have reviews (reviewer’s blog in brackets; wadh is me), and essays and books about them; and secondly reference works and essays about the period in general.
The contributors to AWW Gen 2 Week, Jan 2019 are listed (and warmly thanked) at the end of Journal: 026, On the Road Again (here)
Bill Holloway (26 Jan., 2019)
Agnes Hay (1837-1909) Trove
Louisa Lawson (1848-1920) ADB
Brian Matthews, Louisa (wadh)
The Australian Legend, Louisa Lawson vs Kaye Schaffer here
Barbara Baynton (1857-1929) ADB
Human Toll (1909) (wadh)
Bush Studies (1902) Imprint, 1993 –
Squeaker’s Mate (wadh) (Whispering Gums)
Bush Church (Whispering Gums)
Billy Skywonkie (Whispering Gums)
A Dreamer (Whispering Gums)
Scrammy ‘and (Whispering Gums)
The Chosen Vessel (Whispering Gums)
Penne Hackforth-Jones, Barbara Baynton, Between Two Worlds (1989) (wadh)
Sally Krimmer & Alan Lawson (ed.s), Barbara Baynton, UQP, 1980 (includes Human Toll and Bush Studies)
Whispering Gums, Monday musings on Australian literature: Barbara Baynton here
Alice Henry (1857-1929) ADB
Miles Franklin, On Dearborn Street, 1981 (wadh)
Rose Boldrewood (1862-1935) oldest daughter of Rolf Boldrewood. Full name: Rose Christiana Angell Browne
The Complications at Collaroi, 1911
Recollections of Rolf Boldrewood, 1922
Laura M Palmer (1864-1929) (Wiki)
A Bush Honeymoon & other stories, 1904 (Brona’s Books)
Mary Gilmore (1865-1962) ADB
Anne Brooksbank, All My Love (wadh)
Marion Knowles (1865-1949) ADB
Lilian Turner (1867-1956) Wiki
An Australian Lassie, 1903 here
Mary Fullerton (1868-1946) ADB
Sylvia Martin, Passionate Friends, Onlywomen Press, London, 2001 (wadh)
Vida Goldstein (1869-1949) ADB
Jacqueline Kent, Vida (wadh)
Ethel Turner (1870-1958) ADB
Tales from the Parthenon, 1889-92 (Whispering Gums)
Seven Little Australians, 1894 (Mrs B’s Book Reviews)
The Story of a Baby, 1896 here
In the Mist of the Mountains, 1906 (Brona’s Books)
Beatrice Grimshaw (1870-1953) ADB
Mrs Aeneas Gunn (1870-1961) ADB
We of the Never Never, 1908 here
Louise Mack (1870-1935) ADB
The World is Round, 1893 (Whispering Gums) (Whispering Gums)
Teens: A Story of Australian School Girls, 1897 here (wadh)
Girls Together, 1898 (Whispering Gums)
An Australian Girl in London, 1902 (ANZ LitLovers)
A Woman’s Experiences in the Great War, 1915 here, audio (Nancy Elin)
Whispering Gums, Monday musings on Australian literature: Louise Mack here
ANZ LitLovers, Australian Women War Reporters: Boer War to Vietnam here
Henry Handel Richardson (1870-1946) ADB
Maurice Guest, 1908 (ANZ LitLovers)
The Getting of Wisdom, 1910 (Reading Matters) (Brona’s Books)
The Fortunes of Richard Mahony –
Australia Felix, 1917 (Brona’s Books)
The Way Home, 1925 (Brona’s Books)
Ultima Thule, 1929 (Brona’s Books)
The Adventures of Cuffy Mahony and other stories, 1934 (wadh) (ANZ LitLovers)
The Young Cosima, 1939 (wadh)
Nettie Palmer, Henry Handel Richardson: A Study, A&R, 1950. (ANZ LitLovers).
Elinor Mordaunt (1872-1942) ADB
Mary Louisa (Mollie) Skinner (1876-1955) ADB
Letters of a V.A.D., 1918 here
The Australian Legend, Writing The Boy in the Bush, here
Bertha Lawson (1876-1957) ADB: Bio of her mother, activist Matilda McNamara
My Henry Lawson, 1943 (wadh)
May Gibbs (1877-1969) ADB
Mary Grant Bruce (1878-1958) ADB
Billabong series (Michelle Scott Tucker)
The Early Tales, 1898,1900 (Whispering Gums)
A Little Bush Maid, 1910 download
Mates at Billabong, 1912 download (Brenda)
Back to Billabong, 1914 download
Captain Jim, 1916 download
Possum, 1917 download
Miles Franklin (1879-1954) ADB
My Brilliant Career, 1901 (Book Around the Corner) (Booker Talk)
Joseph Furphy, 1944 (wadh)
see also: Miles Franklin page for a comprehensive listing of reviews and posts
Debbie Robson (here) is preparing a half hour talk on Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Radio Adelaide, Christmas Day 2019
Ethel Anderson (1883-1958) ADB
Miss Aminta Wirraway and the Sin of Lust (wadh)
Juliet McCree is Accused of Gluttony
Nettie Palmer (1885-1964) ADB
The Australian Legend, Such is Life, Abridged! here
Capel Boake/Doris Boake Kerr (1889-1944) ADB
Whispering Gums, Monday musings on Australian literature: Capel Boake here
Whispering Gums, Capel Boake: Three short stories here
Whispering Gums, Capel Boake here (inAWWC)
Gen 1 writers whose later work reflects the influence of Bush Realism –
Rosa Praed (1851-1935) ADB, UniMelb
Sister Sorrow, 1916 (Jessica White)
Mary Gaunt (1861-1942) ADB, UniMelb
Gen 3 writers whose early work reflects the influence of Bush Realism –
Katharine Sussanah Prichard (1883-1969) ADB
The Pioneers, 1915 (Nathan Hobby) (Whispering Gums) (ANZLitLovers)
Windlestraws, 1916 (Nathan Hobby)
Short Stories –
The Bridge, 1917 Trove (Whispering Gums)
Christmas Tree, 1919 Trove (Whispering Gums)
Potch and Colour [collection], 1944 (Nathan Hobby)
Nathan Hobby is writing a KSP biography and has blogged about it over the course of a number of years (here)
The Australian Women Writers Challenge have put up an excellent site (here) listing all books by Australian women, available online, sorted by decade, up to the 1930s.
Reference works and essays
Nettie Palmer, Modern Australian Literature (1924)
Vance Palmer, The Legend of the Nineties (1954) (wadh)
Russel Ward, The Australian Legend (1958)
Frank Moorhouse (ed.), The Drover’s Wife (2017) (wadh)
Colin Roderick was probably the most influential commentator for most of the C20th, but he is shockingly contemptuous of women.
Feminists who contested the men-centred (men-only, really) myths of the Australian Bush include Kay Schaffer, Marilyn Lake, Gail Reekie, Anne Summers. The Pioneer myth was developed by John Hirst, Judith Godden, Jemima Mowbray (and others).
The main male writers were: Henry Lawson, Steele Rudd, Joseph Furphy, AB Paterson, Paul Wenz and poets Henry Kendall, Adam Lindsay Gordon, Maurice Furnley.
Florence Rodway (1881-1971) I saw that Rodway was ‘encouraged’ by Archibald of the Bulletin and so I looked her up. She was mainly a portrait painter – I assume the portrait at the top of this page is of Henry and Bertha Lawson’s daughter – I couldn’t see that she contributed to the Bulletin, though she did to the Lone Hand. Apparently there is a good collection of her work in the Art Gallery NSW. (More here)
I’ve just remembered I have a Louise Mack from my Aunt’s house. I think I’ll do that… But you might have to remind me!
Thanks for all the links!
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You’re welcome. I hope you have the Romance of a Woman of Thirty, sounds intriguing.
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No, I wish it was. It’s her third, Girls together. Probably not exciting but I have a very old English Pilgrim’s Press edition so may as well read it. I don’t imagine it will take long.
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I think that’s the sequel to Teens, that I’ve been reading off and on, on my laptop (I mention it in my next post) very old fashioned, girls own.
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This is such a fabulous resource Bill – congrats!
I also did a review for The Getting if Wisdom a few years ago – http://bronasbooks.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-getting-of-wisdom-by-henry-handel.html?m=1
if you can use it.
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Of course I can. Thankyou.
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] is hosting AWW Gen 2 over at The Australian Legend, and The Pioneers is the book I promised to read for this important […]
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*drum roll*
I’m not sure where to put this so here will have to do: https://anzlitlovers.com/2019/01/09/the-pioneers-by-katharine-susannah-prichard/
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Thanks Lisa. You probably didn’t have to do anything. I’ll link you from the body of the page later tonight
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] novel The Pioneers as part of Australian Women Writers Generation 2 week, co-ordinated by Bill at The Australian Legend. Lisa quite rightly points to the influence of the romance genre on it and the silence on […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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I cannot believe I actually managed to read AND review a book in such a short amount of time – but I made it thanks to my pure enjoyment of Ethel Turner’s In the Mist of the Mountains!
http://bronasbooks.blogspot.com/2019/01/in-mist-of-mountains-by-ethel-turner.html
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[…] Australian Legend) is following up last January’s Australian Women Writers Gen 1 Week with a Gen 2 Week, this one highlighting Australian women writers from 1890 to 1918. He takes his inspiration from […]
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Here’s a little Monday Musings for you: https://whisperinggums.com/2019/01/14/monday-musings-on-australian-literature-capel-boake/ I hope to review my Mack on Wednesday or Thursday.
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Thanks WG. I’ll make a link to yr MM tomorrow (CB’s 6 years younger than KSP, no wonder her material is Gen 3-ish.) Looking forward to your L Mack review.
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And me, yours. I’m finding it more interesting than I thought I might – that is, less girly/fluffy though a girls’ story underpins it.
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 Bill @The Australian Legend […]
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Here is my classic read for the AWW Gen 2 Challenge!
A Woman’s Experiences in the Great War by Louise Mack
AWW Gen 2 Read
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That’s great, thanks Nancy. I’ll make sure everyone gets to read it.
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] any way that I will have completed reading Ever Yours by Catherine Helen Spence in time for Bill’s Australian Women’s Writers Generation 2 (AWW Gen2) Week at The Australian Legend and anyway it’s been reviewed by a proper historian (Janine, at The Resident Judge of Port […]
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[…] are very different. I was prepared to persevere, however, because I was reading the book for Bill’s AWW Gen 2 Week and because this is a classic written in 1898 by a too-little known Australian woman writer. (You […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] Boake in my last Monday Musings, I couldn’t resist checking out some of her short stories. Bill’s AWW Gen 2 Week concluded yesterday, but I hope he’ll accept this post as a […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] expected, I’m late for Bill’s Australian Women’s Writers Generation 2 (AWW Gen2) Week at The Australian Legend* but further to my previous thoughts, I have finally finished this wonderful collection of writings […]
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Better late than never with my second book for AWW Gen II – another Turner – http://bronasbooks.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-story-of-baby-by-ethel-turner.html
Thanks for hosting such a great week of reading Bill 🙂
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Thanks Brona, I’ve just completed a 24 hr break and have written a bit of a summary to go up Fri, so no trouble to include this latest of yours.
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I was late in doing my review of My Brilliant Career but here it https://bookertalk.com/2019/01/23/my-brilliant-career-by-miles-franklin-bookreview/.
Thanks for nudging me into reading this at long last
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] per se, but on a serendipitous find I made while doing some research for one of my posts for Bill’s AWW Gen 2 week. The post was on Louise Mack’s book Girls together, and in my searching I found an entry for […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] (The Australian Legend) hosted his second Australian Women Writers week on his blog, this time for Gen 2 writers. Gen 2 focuses on writing that falls roughly between 1890 and 1918. This month’s Classics […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] I read fewer Classics than last. However, I did read three classic short stories by Capel Boake for Bill’s (The Australian Legend) Gen 2 week as well as Louise Mack’s novel. On the plus side, I read more indigenous writing this year […]
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[…] Australians: Bill’s (The Australian Legend) annual AWW Gen weeks provide the perfect opportunity for me to feed my love of past Aussie women writers. This year […]
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[…] Mary Gaunt (1861-1942) and Louise Mack (1870-1935). We have Bill’s (The Australian Legend) AWW Gen 2 Week to thank for some of these lesser known writers appearing in the Challenge this […]
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[…] theaustralianlegend, AWW Gen 2, 1890-1918 (here) […]
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[…] AWW Gen 2 […]
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[…] Australian Legend’s AWW pages for Gen 1 (1788-1890), Gen 2 (1890-1918) and Gen 3 (1919-1959): compiled by Bill Holloway, each page contains an introduction to the […]
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