Periodicals for schools in nineteenth-century Australia : Catherine Helen Spence and the Children's Hour

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Children's literature in nineteenth-century Australia was a site for the configuration of an imagined federated nation, as critics such as Clare Bradford, Marcie Muir, Brenda Niall, and Maurice Saxby have recognized. In particular, these critics have noted how such literature embodies both the anxieties and the desires of the British colonial enterprise in Australia. Indeed, Martin's edited collection arguably brings together these two competing narrative subtexts. The utopian overture to bind together the old and new worlds of Europe and Australasia through their future citizens is quickly complicated by the coded national anxieties of the stories collected in Over the Sea. These stories frequently overspill with violence and cruelty towards children, as well as the dangers faced by young colonial settlers in isolated bush landscapes. Many of these thematic strands are now recognised as complex tropes represented more broadly in Australian literature and culture across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, particularly the figure of the lost child. Within this context, however, less attention has been paid to a particular type of children's literature that arguably, and very explicitly, engages with the relationship between the imagined Australian nation and the role of the child: the moral or didactic tale. In this essay, I attempt to rethink the significance of this mode of writing through the work of leading Scottish-born Australian educationist, writer, and political reformer Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910). Spence firmly believed that at the heart of a good education was the "enjoyment of a good story." Literature and education were, for Spence, inextricably intertwined and mutually reinforcing, and the fate of the nation or colony depended on its young citizens receiving a decent education. Writing to the editor of the Adelaide Observer in 1857, Spence argued that without a good education, the "political privileges which we have so recently won for our children will be worse than useless." This essay will argue that by reading Spence's children's literature within its original periodical contexts, particularly Australian school papers and magazines, we can gain a better appreciation of its literary and political significance.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)721-736
Number of pages16
JournalVictorian Periodicals Review
Volume50
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • Australian literature
  • Spence, Catherine Helen, 1825, 1910
  • literature for children
  • short stories

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Periodicals for schools in nineteenth-century Australia : Catherine Helen Spence and the Children's Hour'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this