Inheriting the Past: Peter Corris's The Journal of Fletcher Christian and Peter Carey's True History of the Kelly Gang
Peter Carey's True History of the Kelly Gang and Peter Corris's The Journal of Fletcher Christian are historical novels, which emerge from quite different Australian cultural fields (Literature and popular fiction), but reading them alongside each other reveals fundamental similarities in their politics of race, gender and sexuality. We argue that both novels use the symbolism of the male, colonizing body to grant legitimacy to their postcolonial settler audience. In both cases, this legitimacy takes the form of a fragment of "true and secret" history which opposes authorized accounts of famous historical lives and events (Australia's most famous bushranger, the British Empire's most famous mutineer). We focus, in particular, on the extent to which both novels imagine the voices of Kelly and Christian by exploiting the richly metaphorical relationship between the body as flesh and the body as text. © The Author(s) 2010.
History
Publication title
Journal of Commonwealth LiteratureVolume
45Pagination
189-206ISSN
0021-9894Department/School
School of HumanitiesPublisher
Cambridge Scientific AbstractsPlace of publication
Farringdon House, 3Rd Fl, Wood Street, E GrinsteadRights statement
Copyright 2010 Sage PublicationsRepository Status
- Restricted
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