Issue Details: First known date: 2006... 2006 The Holiday-Maker's Happy Hunting Ground : Travel Writing in Queensland, 1860-1950
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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Queensland Review vol. 13 no. 1 2006 Z1366647 2006 periodical issue

    'This issue opens with papers on colonial Queensland by Kerry Heckenberg and Denis Cryle. Heckenberg's paper, 'Conflicting Visions', explores the life and art of the Queensland-born painter William George Wilson, whose work graces our cover. In a serendipitous connection with Denis Cryle's paper, William George Wilson (1849-1924) was the son' of the wealthy Scottish squatter William Wilson,. who arrived in Moreton Bay in 1843. Cryle's paper, 'Scottish Intellectuals in Colonial Queensland', argues that the dominant narrative of the colonial Scots as entrepreneurial and often ruthless pastoralists, politicians and businessmen fails to take into account the contributions of Scots to education, journalism, and the life of the mind ·and soul more generally. His case studies of two exemplars of 'Scotus Intellectualis' - John Dunmore Lang and George Wight - outline the intellectual and civic contributions of these two Protestant clergymen to the early colony of Queensland.' (Editorial)

    2006
    pg. 63-77
Alternative title: The Holiday-Maker's Happy Hunting Ground : Travel Writing in Queensland
Notes:
Expanded and revised version of earlier work.
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon By the Book : A Literary History of Queensland Patrick Buckridge (editor), Belinda McKay (editor), St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2007 Z1392518 2007 anthology criticism

    'Queensland is known in the Australian imagination as the frontier, a place of barren land and wild politics – and, conversely, as Australia's playground, with its sub-tropical weather, beaches and natural wonders. It's a place that has long had an image of difference to the rest of the country, both within and without its borders, an image based in the reality of a different sense of distance, a different apprehension of time, different architecture.'

    'By the Book presents a wide-ranging history of the literature of Queensland from European settlement to the present day, a period of immense change for this state. The state is broken up into geographic regions, with each chapter building a rich sense of the regional specificity of its literary culture.'

    'Thematic chapters are also included, covering travel writing, writing for children, and indigenous writing. By the Book also covers the role of institutions such as schools, public libraries, the press and publishers in shaping the writing and reading of books in Queensland.' (Source: ABC shop website)

    St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2007
    pg. 301-322; notes 362-365
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