期刊论文详细信息
Genealogy
Tracing a Female Mind in Late Nineteenth Century Australia: Rose Selwyn
article
Paula Jane Byrne1 
[1] State Library of New South Wales
关键词: colonization;    feminism;    tractarian;    women;    poetry;    intellectual life;   
DOI  :  10.3390/genealogy7020030
学科分类:公共、环境与职业健康
来源: mdpi
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Rose Selwyn (1824–1905) was a first wave Australian feminist and public speaker. The poetry, art, and scraps of writing Rose left in her archive allow the reader to piece together an intellectual history, a genealogy of the making of self. Rose attained her way of being through several contemporary influences—the mysticism of Tractarianism, a concern with death and its meanings, an interest in the literary edges of the world, a concern with the suffering body, and a passion for women and a woman-centred world. From these tangled contemporary concerns, she made a feminism for all non-Aboriginal women apparent in her speeches. Her role as a colonising woman in a violent landscape created a complex relationship with Aboriginal people where she may be seen to be criticising her elite landholding (squatter) peers and introducing concepts such as an Aboriginal parliament.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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