This book compares the nineteenth-century settler literatures of Australia, Canada, South Africa, and the United States in order to examine how they enable readers to manage guilt accompanying European settlement. Reading canonical texts such as Last of the Mohicans and Backwoods of Canada against underanalyzed texts such as Adventures in Canada and George Linton or the First Years of a British Colony, it demonstrates how tropes like the settler hero and his indigenous servant, the animal hunt, the indigenous attack, and the lost child cross national boundaries. Settlers similarly responded to the stressors of taking another’s land through the stories they told about themselves, which functioned to defend against uncomfortable feelings of guilt and ambivalence by creating new versions of reality. This book traces parallels in 20th and 21st century texts to ultimately argue that contemporary settlers continue to fight similar psychological and cultural battles since settlement is never complete.
Examines a wide range of contexts, including South Africa, Australia, Canada and the US Refers to situations from the nineteenth century to the present Makes a timely intervention into world and postcolonial studies
Rebecca Weaver-Hightower
Indigenous Native Americans New World Indians Colonialism Australia Aboriginal Kate Grenville James Fenimore Cooper Freud Canada South Africa
“Frontier Fictions is a timely book: accessing an archive that was never previously the subject of comparative and transnational scrutiny, it focuses on moments of ambivalence in Anglophone settler literatures. It compellingly highlights a number of recurring tropes and a suite of defensive mechanisms that accompany a particular psychological state: that of the settler. Frontier Fictions demonstrates that first generation settlers globally used the novel as a crucial site for the elaboration and displacement of guilt. Focusing on settler collective and personal guilt and on the multiple ways in which it is managed, this book contributes significantly to the analysis of global settlement processes.” (Lorenzo Veracini, Associate Professor in History at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia)