In this article Pearce contends that multiculturalism has been a part of
Australia's official discourse for almost thirty years (at time of
writing). She claims that the progress of multiculturalism can be traced
through books for children and young adults. To support this argument
Pearce refers to an article and a chapter by John Stephens on multiculturalism to frame her paper.
Initially, Pearce outlines the two main stages of multiculturalism in
children's texts identified by Stephens. The first stage contains texts
written by authors from the dominant Anglo-Celtic majority and feature
focalisers and narrators from that same group. The second stage sees a
shift to include characters and narrators from ethnic minority groups
which provide an 'insider perspective' but such texts are still usually
mediated through Anglo-Celtic authors. Pearce then proposes a third
stage in which texts use 'authentic' voices created by authors from
minority backgrounds. Rather than focus on aspects of 'difference' the
characters' cultural heritage is incidental, rather than pivotal, to
their developing subjectivities. The third stage includes texts in which,
according to Pearce, ethnicity is not the marker of cultural difference,
but an accepted part of Australian life.