'This article contributes to discussions about the significance of fences in the
Australian social imaginary. It undertakes a historical and intertextual reading of
eight short stories that take the fence as their titular symbol, and explores how the
fence story is rewritten at various moments of change in twentieth-century
Australia. Developments in narrative form and representation are related to
changes in the cultural and political contexts, through a critical engagement with
Iser's argument that the institution of literature works through a 'constant
crossing of the boundary between the real and the imaginary'. As an Australian
icon, the fence image illustrates the continuing power of settler discourse;
however, the literary reworkings of the fence story disclose new visions of identity
and otherness.' (Author's abstract)