

An edition of In the Wake of First Contact (1995)
the Eliza Fraser stories
By Kay Schaffer
Publish Date
1995
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
320
Description:
In The Wake of First Contact explores one of the best known events in Australian colonial history. In 1836 the Stirling Castle was wrecked off the Queensland coast and many of the crew together with the Captain's wife, Eliza Fraser, were marooned on Fraser Island. Stories and images about the events were published immediately and were soon in wide circulation. They reflected the cultural attitudes of the time, casting Mrs Fraser as a 'civilised' white woman taken captive by 'savage' blacks. In the 160 years since the event, the story of Eliza Fraser has become the subject of popular myth, fiction, poetry, opera, art, film and scholarly research. In this exciting and original book, Kay Schaffer looks at the historical, ethnographic, literary, artistic and popular manifestations of Eliza Fraser as a fictional presence in Australian culture from the 1830s to recent times. . The book investigates representations of masculinity and femininity, self and other. It examines the organisation of racial, class, gendered and national identities evident in the various retellings of the Eliza Fraser story, and interprets them critically. Drawing on recent post-colonial, feminist, and post-structuralist theories, as well as the ethnographic data, it discusses the role of these stories and images in regulating power relations of empire, colony and nation.
subjects: Historiography, Literature and history, Race in literature, History and criticism, Australian literature, Modern Literature, Literature, Modern, Women and literature, First contact of aboriginal peoples with Westerners, In literature, Aboriginal Australians in literature, History, Fraser, eliza anne, Australia, history, Australian literature, history and criticism, Literature, modern, history and criticism, Literature, First contact (Anthropology), Portraits, In art
People: Eliza Anne Fraser
Places: Australia
Times: 1788-1851, 19th century