在两次世界大战之间和第二次世界大战期间的澳大利亚妇女书写历史

M. Cooper
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摘要

在两次世界大战之间和第二次世界大战期间,女性作家以前所未有的方式在澳大利亚文坛占据了主导地位,创作了大量重要的小说、戏剧和非虚构作品,这些作品质疑了殖民主义、民族主义、性别关系和澳大利亚在世界上的地位等问题。这些作品中的许多都有时代背景,或者以某种方式与澳大利亚的移民殖民历史有关。虽然澳大利亚女作家的历史作品在文学风格、体裁、文化价值、政治立场以及她们对国家进步思想的争论或具体化的程度上存在很大差异,但这些作品对20世纪20年代末至40年代中期对国家过去的重新想象做出了重大贡献。此外,由于当时澳大利亚作家出版和发行的新流动性,这些女作家的许多虚构作品都超越了国界。两个主要的案例研究揭示了在两次世界大战之间和第二次世界大战期间,澳大利亚女性作家在国内和国际背景下对澳大利亚历史写作的贡献:巴纳德·埃尔德肖先生(马乔里·巴纳德(1897-1987)和芙罗拉·埃尔德肖(1897-1956)的文学合作的笔名)和埃莉诺·帕克(1901-1985)。
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Australian Women Writing History during the Interwar and Second World War Years
In the interwar and Second World War periods, women writers took the lead in the Australian literary scene in an unprecedented way, producing a number of significant novels, plays, and works of nonfiction that interrogated issues of colonialism, nationalism, gender relations, and Australia’s place in the world. Many of these works had period settings or were engaged in some way with Australia’s settler colonial past. While the historical writings of Australian women writers vary greatly in terms of literary style, genre, cultural value, political affiliation, and the degree to which they either contest or reify ideas of national progress, these works represent a substantial contribution to the reimagining of the nation’s past in the period from the late 1920s to the mid-1940s. Furthermore, many of the fictional works of these women writers traveled beyond national borders due to the new mobilities of publication and distribution available to Australian writers at the time. Two major case studies reveal the ways in which Australian women writers contributed to the writing of Australian history in both national and international contexts in the interwar and Second World War years: M. Barnard Eldershaw, the pseudonym for the literary collaboration between Marjorie Barnard (1897–1987) and Flora Eldershaw (1897–1956), and Eleanor Dark (1901–1985).
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