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Tales of the Austral Tropics
is the first critical edition of stories by Ernest Favenc, which were first
published in Sydney's Bulletin in the 1890s. Together with contributions
by Henry Lawson, A. B. Paterson, Price Warung, Louis Becke and others,
they played an essential part in the formation of Australia's national
mythology. The stories were republished in volume form in both Sydney and
London.
Favenc's stories draw their vivid realism from the author's twenty years' experience as an explorer and rover in north Queensland. Some are romances of mateship and self-sacrifice, while others are comedies that celebrate ther virtuosity of bush tricksters. However, the most characteristic stories return to the theme of death in the desert, mangroves and caves. Their obsessive horror and ugliness are suggestive of tensions in the national identity, as it emerged in an alien environment, to confront many kinds of racial and cultural differences. In Tales of Austral Tropics Favenc's extensive revisions of the stories, as he reshaped them for different audiences, are included in full, together with the historical introduction that regathers for the modern reader the contexts in which the stories first appeared. |
Between 1871 and 1880 Favenc published fiction
and poetry irregularly in the Queenslander. Between 1880 and 1883
he turned to journalism and wrote most frequently for the Sydney Mail.
After a break in his newspaper publications in the mid-1880s, Favenc's
writing first resurfaced in a prose sketch published in the Bulletin
in 1998. He continued to make contributions to the Bulletin, the
Australiasian, and to the Queensland Punch and the Sydney
Mail. Favenc's death on 14 November 1908 was widely reported and commented
upon in Australian newspapers and magazines. He was buried at Waverley
Cemetery.
Last Updated : 1 March 2007