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Ethel Pedley (1859–1898)

Autor von Dot and the Kangaroo

7 Werke 152 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

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Werke von Ethel Pedley

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Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Pedley, Ethel Charlotte
Geburtstag
1859-06-19
Todestag
1898-08-06
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
England, UK (birth)
Australia
Geburtsort
Acton, London, England, UK
Sterbeort
Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia
Wohnorte
Acton, England, UK (birthplace)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Ausbildung
Royal Academy of Music
Berufe
children's book author
musician
music teacher
Organisationen
Royal Academy of Music
Kurzbiographie
Ethel Pedley was born at Acton, an area of West London, the daughter of Frederick Pedley and his wife Eliza Dolby. She began taking piano lessons at age five. Due to her father's poor health, the family emigrated to Australia in the 1870s, but Ethel returned to London to attend the Royal Academy of Music. She studied with her uncle by marriage Prosper Sainton, a French violinist, and her aunt Charlotte Sainton-Dolby, a famous contralto. In 1882, Ethel went back to Sydney, where she taught singing and the violin and founded the all-female St. Cecilia Choir. In 1896, she traveled to London with her companion Emmeline Woolley to ask the Boards of the Royal Academy of Music and the Royal College of Music to extend their examinations to the Australian colonies. They succeeded, and Ethel was named the Board's only representative in Australia at the time. In addition to her music career, Ethel published one book for young people, Dot and the Kangaroo, with illustrations by Frank P. Mahony. It was issued posthumously in 1899 and became a classic of Australian literature for children, adapted into a stage play, an animated film, and other media. Ethel died of cancer in 1898 at the age of 39.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Gah, I don't know what to do. You're damned if you do, damned if you don't with this one. Ethel Pedley's work has not survived the last 30 years with as much affection as her fellow children's writer, Ethel Turner (of Seven Little Australians). Her book is not terribly PC, what with its pick-and-choose conservation messages (love kangaroos! but keep farming animals for slaughter who don't really suit the landscape!), superficial Aboriginal stereotypes, and somewhat old-fashioned approach to children's morality that would have been perfectly at home in the 1890s but less so now. However, from a historian's perspective, this was a hugely influential work for a few generations of children, and a book that asked for children to understand Australia on its terms, not those of the British. Of course, I appreciate that Pedley is subconsciously still pushing a pro-British angle, but I'd like to think a child can still enjoy the tale of young Dot.… (mehr)
 
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therebelprince | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 21, 2024 |
The defining example of that bizarre old-timey trope in which nature-loving misanthropy finds its apex in racism. A mostly nice kiddie book that takes hideous swings at the Aboriginal community because colonialism means we can't have nice things.
 
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wallymeadows | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 18, 2021 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
7
Mitglieder
152
Beliebtheit
#137,198
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
38
Sprachen
2

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