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Education and work in service of the nation: Canadian and Australian girls' fiction, 1908-1921

Version 2 2024-06-03, 20:31
Version 1 2014-10-28, 10:40
chapter
posted on 2024-06-03, 20:31 authored by Kristine MoruziKristine Moruzi, M Smith
This chapter compares early twentieth-century Australian novels by Ethel Turner, Mary Grant Bruce, and Lilian Turner to Canadian novels by Nellie McClung and L.M. Montgomery to demonstrate important differences in attitudes towards education and work. Girls’ fiction in these white settler colonies has many similarities, containing strong ideals related to domesticity, education, employment, and femininity. In the Canadian fiction, attitudes towards women’s higher education and employement are generally much more positive. Although both Australian and Canadian girls’ fiction typically conclude with marriage, Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables and Nellie McClung’s Pearlie Watson are offered the opportunity to pursue higher education and use this education to teach others. In contrast, Lilian Turner’s Paradise and the Perrys, Ethel Turner’s Fair Ines, and Mary Grant Bruce’s ’Possum emphasise the importance of domesticity while also showing how girls sought to earn income without leaving home. Through our comparison of these Canadian and Australian novels, all published between 1908 and 1921, we demonstrate how the different feminine ideals embodied through these heroines are inevitably intertwined with the needs of the nation

History

Chapter number

13

Pagination

180-194

ISBN-13

9781137356345

ISBN-10

1137356340

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2014, Palgrave Macmillan

Extent

16

Editor/Contributor(s)

Moruzi K, Smith M

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Place of publication

Basingstoke, England

Title of book

Colonial girlhood in literature, culture and history, 1840-1950

Series

Palgrave studies in nineteenth-century writing and culture