Issue Details: First known date: 1881... 1881 Policy and Passion : A Novel of Australian Life
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Adaptations

Passion Wybert Reeve , 1884 single work drama

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Other Formats

Works about this Work

Friday Essay : ‘A Prisoner on the Rack’ – How 19th-century Australian Women Wrote about Marital Rape Zoe Smith , 2024 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 22 March 2024;
Love Is Not Enough : Australian Romantic Fiction from the Mid-nineteenth to the Early Twentieth Century Hsu-Ming Teo , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Cambridge History of the Australian Novel 2023;
Rosa Praed's Policy and Passion John Uhr , Shaun Crowe , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Novel Politics : Studies in Australian Political Fiction 2020;
Proleptic Modernism? A Reconsideration of the Literature of Colonial Queensland Belinda McKay , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , vol. 23 no. 2 2016; (p. 116-132)
'Susan Stanford Friedman argues that modernisms are multiple, polycentric and recurrent. This article takes up her invitation to focus on the circulation of people and ideas that connected modernisms from different parts of the planet by reconsidering two moments in the literature of colonial Queensland as instances of proleptic modernism. The publications of Policy and Passion by Rosa Praed in 1881 in London, and of the ‘The Red Snake’ by Francis Adams in 1888 in Brisbane encapsulate early manifestations of the cultural unease and destabilisation that drove the development of modernism/s as the expressive domain of modernity/ies. Striking thematic and stylistic parallels with the work of canonical modernists — HD in the case of Praed, and Conrad in the case of Adams — suggest not only that modernism began to manifest itself in Anglophone culture much earlier than is generally conceded, but also that the cognitive dissonance generated by the colonial experience was centrally implicated in its development.' (Publication abstract)
‘A Peacock's Plume Among a Pile of Geese Feathers’ : Rosa Praed in the United States David Carter , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , June vol. 21 no. 1 2014; (p. 23-38)

'Rosa Praed has been claimed as ‘the first Australian-born novelist to achieve a significant international reputation.’ Almost certainly, she was the first Australian-born novelist to be published in the United States, although she was in England by the time her first novel appeared in America in 1883. Of Praed's forty-seven published works, twenty-five appeared in American editions in the three decades from 1883 to 1915, including twenty-four of her thirty-eight novels in more than forty separate editions. In the years either side of the century's turn, she was among the best known Australian writers in America, alongside Louis Becke and Rolf Boldrewood.' (Publication abstract)

Policy and Passion 1881 single work review
— Appears in: The Queenslander , 25 June 1881; (p. 810)

— Review of Policy and Passion : A Novel of Australian Life Rosa Praed , 1881 single work novel
Two Women Novelists Nancy Cato , 1960 single work review
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 8 June vol. 81 no. 4191 1960; (p. 2,58)

— Review of Morning in Queensland Margaret Trist , 1958 single work novel ; Policy and Passion : A Novel of Australian Life Rosa Praed , 1881 single work novel
Literary Imaginings of the Bunya Belinda McKay , Patrick Buckridge , 2002 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , November vol. 9 no. 2 2002; (p. 65-79)
'By the time that Europeans became acquainted with the bunya, the gum tree was already well established as the iconic Australian tree. The genus Eucalyptus, with all its locally specific variants, was both distinctive to the continent and widely dispersed throughout it. In contrast, the bunya tree (classified as Araucaria bidwillii in 1843) grew in a small area of what is now South-East Queensland and was seen by few Europeans before the 1840s, when Moreton Bay was opened to free settlement. The physical distinctiveness of the bunya tree, and stories of the large gatherings which accompanied the triennial harvesting ofits nut, aroused the curiosity of early European explorers and settlers, and in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the bunya tree achieved a special status in local civic culture. Although heavy logging had largely destroyed the great bunya forests, the tree was planted extensively in school grounds, around war memorials and in long avenues in parks.' (Introduction) 
Rosa Praed's Readership : In Search of an Australian Audience Julieanne Lamond , 2007 single work criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 67 no. 1-2 2007; (p. 121-134)
'Altogether Better-Bred Looking' : Race and Romance in the Australian Novels of Rosa Praed Len Platt , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , no. 8 2008; (p. 31-44)
'This essay connects Praed's writing with late nineteenth and early twentieth century history with particular reference to the race issue. It explores races discourses -- Anglo-Saxonism, Celticism and Social Darwininism -- as thse appear in range of Praed's work and shows how scientific racism shaped Praed's reaction to Black Australia.'
Britishness and Australian Popular Fiction : From the Mid-Nineteenth to the Mid-Twentieth Centuries Hsu-Ming Teo , 2012 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sold by the Millions : Australia's Bestsellers 2012; (p. 46-66)
'The analysis offered here is [...], a panoptic perspective of the tangled skeins of literary imagination and imitation, gender and genre requirements, editorial control, market considerations and the sheer economics of the international book trade that knotted Australian popular literature into the cultural and economic fabric of the British empire.' (47)
The Anglo-Australian : Between Colony and Metropolis in Rosa Praed's 'The Right Honourable' and Policy and Passion Julieanne Lamond , 2012 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Literary Studies , May vol. 27 no. 1 2012; (p. 33-46)
Last amended 24 Aug 2017 15:57:34
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