Arcady in Australia Arcady in Australia

Arcady in Australia

The evocation of Australia in nineteenth-century English Literature

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Publisher Description

This provocative book examines the vision of Australia in nineteenth-century English literature. The industrial revolution destroyed the myth of an idyllic rural way of life in England, and writers like Charles Dickens, Bulwer Lytton and Charles Reade created it anew in the improbable environment of Australia. The popular image of Australia in English literature was Arcadian; in turn it dominated the thought and traditions of writing in Australia.

The man who supplied the material for English writers was Samuel Sidney; he was for a time regarded as an expert on Australia, although he had never set foot in the antipodes and all his material was second-hand. His influence on the literature of the period, and consequently on Australia, has received scant attention.

Sidney's influence is fully examined; the book also offers entirely new material on Wakefield, Dickens, Lytton and Reade. It provides a new and challenging interpretation of literature and social history in both England and Australia.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
1971
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
212
Pages
PUBLISHER
Melbourne University Publishing
SELLER
Simon & Schuster Digital Sales LLC
SIZE
1.3
MB