We seek 2-3
additional essays for a special issue of Women’s Writing on Nineteenth-Century Australian and New
Zealand Girls’ Culture.
Colonial girls’ culture is receiving growing critical
attention, prompting us to rethink its significance for women’s writing. The
journal Women’s Writing invites
original papers for a special issue dedicated to the colonial girl and her
literature in nineteenth-century Australia.
What was it like to be a girl at “the antipodes” in the
nineteenth century? How was the colonial girl constructed, both “back home” and
throughout the British Empire, and how did she view and represent herself?
Was there a distinctly “antipodal,” Australian, or New Zealand girls’ culture
and in what ways did it parallel, overlap with, influence, and in turn, become
influenced by constructions of girlhood in other parts of the Empire? How did
antipodal girls’ culture harness and redefine imperialist ideologies and their
malleable relationship to domesticity? In what ways did their literary
representation not only mould imperialist representations, but help to shape
nineteenth-century literature in English in general, including children’s and
especially popular girls’ fiction, which was emerging as a distinct genre in
the course of the century? These are some of the questions that individual
articles will be addressing. The colonial girl’s changing depiction in
Victorian culture at the same time raises larger issues about the
representation of the antipodes in British and colonial texts. A new look at
colonial girlhood constructively draws into question the still dominating
discourses on male mateship, for example. In addition, it helps us to reassess
the wide range of genres that constituted nineteenth-century Australian and New
Zealand literature and read them in tandem with similar cultural
formations.
This special issue aims to create a forum for a more
encompassing approach to nineteenth-century Australian and New Zealand literature,
while providing new insight into Victorian representations of girlhood and how
the figure of the colonial girl helped change these representations.
- Topics may include but are not limited to:
- Colonial girlhood and its literary representation
- The construction of colonial girls’ culture
- Australian girls’ magazines and periodicals
- “The antipodes” in both British and colonial girls’ publications
- Colonial children’s literature and writing for girls
- Individual authors and their works
- Comparative approaches
Contributors should follow the journal’s house style details
of which are to be found on the Women’s
Writing web site http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/09699082.asp
This is the new MLA. Please note that instead of footnotes,
we use endnotes with NO bibliography. All bibliographical information is
included in the endnotes. For example, we require place of publication,
publisher and date of publication in brackets after a book is cited for the
first time. Please also include an abstract, a brief biographical blurb
(approximately 100 words), and a key of 6 words suitable for indexing and
abstracting services.