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y separately published work icon An Australian Parsonage : Or, the Settler and the Savage in Western Australia single work   autobiography   prose   travel  
Issue Details: First known date: 1872... 1872 An Australian Parsonage : Or, the Settler and the Savage in Western Australia
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Affiliation Notes

  • Nineteenth-Century Travel Writing

    Mrs. Edward Millet (Janet, 1821-1904), was a sketcher and watercolorist. Wife of Chaplain Edward Millett, they moved to Western Australia in late 1863, where Edward was appointed Incumbent of Holy Trinity Church of England, York, approximate 100 kilometers east of Perth. Millett’s work was based on their five years in Western Australia, and she prefaced the work by explaining that little was known of this particular colony in England due to the lack of guide books and histories, particularly in comparison to the plentitude of such work that focussed on other Australian colonies. As such, emigrants had been disappointed due to their ignorance of Western Australia, as their hopes rarely attained fruition within the colony. Millet stated that her work was not a guide or history of the colony, rather it is sketched of her experiences. As the title suggests, An Australian Parsonage; or, The Settler and the Savage in Western Australia provided a comparison between colonists and Aboriginal people in Western Australia, describing domestic and station life, as well as their travel to and within the colony of Western Australia. Written in engaging and personal manner, Millet also described the bush, emigrants within the colony, climate, Aboriginal populations and specifically her relationship with her Aboriginal servants, and the colony in general.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • London,
      c
      England,
      c
      c
      United Kingdom (UK),
      c
      Western Europe, Europe,
      :
      E. Stanford ,
      1872 .
      image of person or book cover 221224053628861783.jpg
      Link: 21275690Full text document Sighted: 10/03/2021
      Extent: xvi, 415p.

      Holdings

      Held at: State Library of Tasmania State Library of Tasmania
      Location: Australian Collection
      Local Id: 919.5 M

      Holdings

      Held at: Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies AIATSIS Library
      Local Id: RB M653.73/A1

Works about this Work

'My Head Cook...Appeared in an Evening Dress of Black Net and Silver' : (Re)Viewing Colonial Western Australians through Travellers' Imaginings Cindy Lane , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: Melbourne Historical Journal , no. 39 2011; (p. 175-196)
'Did travel writers who observed the white European population in Western Australia in the latter half of the nineteenth century feel that they 'stood [a]mong them but not of them', and to what extent were their ideas preconceived? This article examines how contemporary thought and ideology influenced travellers' attitudes towards white Western Australian society between 1850 and 1914. In witting about the colonists, travellers' observations shaped, and were shaped by, the assumptions, ambitions, and ideologies of the institutions they represented, and those already existing in Western Australian society.' (p. 175)
Deconstructing Utopia : The Blind Metaphors of Colonial Painters and Diarists John Hay , 1987 single work criticism biography
— Appears in: The Writer's Sense of the Past : Essays on Southeast Asian and Australasian Literature 1987; (p. 133-151)
Another Planet : Landscape as Metaphor in Western Australian Theatre Bill Dunstone , 1985 single work criticism
— Appears in: European Relations : Essays for Helen Watson-Williams 1985; (p. 67-79)
'My Head Cook...Appeared in an Evening Dress of Black Net and Silver' : (Re)Viewing Colonial Western Australians through Travellers' Imaginings Cindy Lane , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: Melbourne Historical Journal , no. 39 2011; (p. 175-196)
'Did travel writers who observed the white European population in Western Australia in the latter half of the nineteenth century feel that they 'stood [a]mong them but not of them', and to what extent were their ideas preconceived? This article examines how contemporary thought and ideology influenced travellers' attitudes towards white Western Australian society between 1850 and 1914. In witting about the colonists, travellers' observations shaped, and were shaped by, the assumptions, ambitions, and ideologies of the institutions they represented, and those already existing in Western Australian society.' (p. 175)
Deconstructing Utopia : The Blind Metaphors of Colonial Painters and Diarists John Hay , 1987 single work criticism biography
— Appears in: The Writer's Sense of the Past : Essays on Southeast Asian and Australasian Literature 1987; (p. 133-151)
Another Planet : Landscape as Metaphor in Western Australian Theatre Bill Dunstone , 1985 single work criticism
— Appears in: European Relations : Essays for Helen Watson-Williams 1985; (p. 67-79)
Last amended 14 Mar 2022 12:51:27
Subjects:
  • Western Australia,
Settings:
  • Western Australia,
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