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Transforming Narratives of Colonial Danger: Imagining the Environments of New Zealand and Australia in Children's Literature, 1862–1899

Version 2 2024-06-17, 16:22
Version 1 2015-11-20, 19:23
chapter
posted on 2024-06-17, 16:22 authored by MJ Smith
Nineteenth-century British children’s literature set in Australia and New Zealand fixates on the dangers of colonial environments. This chapter examines four British novels of the period, observing the ways in which they manifest elements of ecological imperialism and environmental racism in order to depict successful settlement. It compares these novels with fantasy fictions by Australian and New Zealand children’s authors that constitute more complicated attempts both to understand and co-exist with the natural environment. The chapter proposes that by the 1890s earlier British anxieties had dissipated in popular Australian and New Zealand fiction, in which child protagonists were newly charged with the ability to interpret and control nature.

History

Chapter number

10

Pagination

183-200

ISBN-13

9781137489401

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter, B Book chapter

Copyright notice

2015, Palgrave Macmillan

Extent

15

Editor/Contributor(s)

Robinson S, Sleight S

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Place of publication

Basingstoke, Eng.

Title of book

Children, childhood and youth in the British world

Series

Palgrave studies in the history of childhood