Inverse Invasions: Medievalism and Colonialism in Rolf Boldrewood's A Sydney-Side Saxon
Author(s) -
Louise D’Arcens
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
parergon
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.103
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 1832-8334
pISSN - 0313-6221
DOI - 10.1353/pgn.2006.0010
Subject(s) - colonialism , portrait , history , indigenous , ethnic group , settlement (finance) , narrative , politics , genealogy , ethnology , art history , literature , art , anthropology , sociology , law , archaeology , political science , ecology , world wide web , computer science , payment , biology
Rolf Boldrewood's forgotten 1894 novel, A Sydney-Side Saxon, merits re-examination as a fascinating nineteenth-century medievalist vision of Australian national identity. The novel's vision of pastoral Australia depends on idiosyncratic notions of Saxon and Norman ethnicity derived from Scott's Ivanhoe. While Scott's portrait of post-conquest England dramatizes the ethnic and political conflict between Norman conquerors and subjected Saxons, Boldrewood consistently presents Norman and Saxons as two complementary sides of an English 'type' that is perfectly fitted to achieve the colonial settlement of Australia. Boldrewood's racialized vision of England's medieval past informs not only his novel's celebration of colonial meritocracy in Australia, but also its apologia for colonial violence and indigenous dispossession. As in Ivanhoe, however, the dispossessed Others of Boldrewood's novel continue to haunt the margins of its narrative.
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