Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A Gum-Tree Exile: Randolph Bedford in Italy

View through CrossRef
Randolph Bedford (1868–1941) was an Australian journalist, politician and novelist, a lifelong socialist despite making a small fortune from mining. He was among the ‘brain drain’ of Australians at the turn of last century, who hoped to emulate Melba’s success in England. Many of his contemporaries, such as Henry Lawson, experienced disillusion and poverty, and returned home. Bedford differed in his versatility, and also his profound rejection of the British Empire. He could not sell his novels initially, nor his speculations to British investors, but was able to put his mining experience to use in Italy. There he became one of the first Australians to fall in love with the country. His attraction to Italy was partly aesthetic, its artistic glories, but also because it reinforced his sentimental Australian nationalism. He saw similarities in landscape, and also in climate. He wrote despatches back to the Bulletin called ‘Explorations in Civilization’, which became a book in 1916. The subtitle was ‘An Australian in Exile’, reversing the ‘Exiles We’, of the first settlers, with their nostalgia for Britain. In contrast, Bedford saw nothing good in London and the Empire. He disliked it upon first sight, and his irreverence and socialist sympathies had no place in the conservative British investment milieu. Bedford would sell two novels in Britain, via Henry Lawson (whom he helped in London) and his literary agent J. B. Pinker. But he returned home, certain expatriate life was not for him, and devoted his energies to Australia. His real success was in Explorations in Civilization, superb travel-writing, perhaps his best work. It shows his love for his country being reinforced through the perceived similarities between it and Italy, a second homeland for him. He even paid its people his highest compliment: that they were his preferred settlers for Australia.
Title: A Gum-Tree Exile: Randolph Bedford in Italy
Description:
Randolph Bedford (1868–1941) was an Australian journalist, politician and novelist, a lifelong socialist despite making a small fortune from mining.
He was among the ‘brain drain’ of Australians at the turn of last century, who hoped to emulate Melba’s success in England.
Many of his contemporaries, such as Henry Lawson, experienced disillusion and poverty, and returned home.
Bedford differed in his versatility, and also his profound rejection of the British Empire.
He could not sell his novels initially, nor his speculations to British investors, but was able to put his mining experience to use in Italy.
There he became one of the first Australians to fall in love with the country.
His attraction to Italy was partly aesthetic, its artistic glories, but also because it reinforced his sentimental Australian nationalism.
He saw similarities in landscape, and also in climate.
He wrote despatches back to the Bulletin called ‘Explorations in Civilization’, which became a book in 1916.
The subtitle was ‘An Australian in Exile’, reversing the ‘Exiles We’, of the first settlers, with their nostalgia for Britain.
In contrast, Bedford saw nothing good in London and the Empire.
He disliked it upon first sight, and his irreverence and socialist sympathies had no place in the conservative British investment milieu.
Bedford would sell two novels in Britain, via Henry Lawson (whom he helped in London) and his literary agent J.
B.
Pinker.
But he returned home, certain expatriate life was not for him, and devoted his energies to Australia.
His real success was in Explorations in Civilization, superb travel-writing, perhaps his best work.
It shows his love for his country being reinforced through the perceived similarities between it and Italy, a second homeland for him.
He even paid its people his highest compliment: that they were his preferred settlers for Australia.

Related Results

Ilmar Laabani (luule)dialoog Paul Celani ja Nelly Sachsiga / Ilmar Laaban’s (poetic) dialogue with Paul Celan and Nelly Sachs
Ilmar Laabani (luule)dialoog Paul Celani ja Nelly Sachsiga / Ilmar Laaban’s (poetic) dialogue with Paul Celan and Nelly Sachs
Ilmar Laabani pärandi hulgas Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi Eesti Kultuuriloolises Arhiivis on säilinud mõned näited tema saksakeelsest kirjavahetusest kahe saksa-juudi luuletajaga: kolm ...
Darwin and the Tree of Life: the roots of the evolutionary tree
Darwin and the Tree of Life: the roots of the evolutionary tree
To speak of evolutionary trees and of the Tree of Life has become routine in evolution studies, despite recurrent objections. Because it is not immediately obvious why a tree is su...
The tree as evolutionary icon: TREE in the Natural History Museum, London (William T. Stearn Prize 2010)
The tree as evolutionary icon: TREE in the Natural History Museum, London (William T. Stearn Prize 2010)
As part of the Darwin celebrations in 2009, the Natural History Museum in London unveiled TREE, the first contemporary artwork to win a permanent place in the Museum. While the art...
‘Single’ and Alone: Tibetan Youth in Exile in India
‘Single’ and Alone: Tibetan Youth in Exile in India
This article seeks to understand the experience of Tibetan youth in exile in India on three interlinked registers: the first is premised on the context in which they are in exile. ...
The Cemetery, the State and the Exiles: A Study of Cementerio Colón, Havana, and Woodlawn Cemetery, Miami
The Cemetery, the State and the Exiles: A Study of Cementerio Colón, Havana, and Woodlawn Cemetery, Miami
One of the unsuspected costs of exile is the inability to care for the family tombs for which, especially in Latin American countries, one may feel a sharp personal responsibility....
The tree that responds: taming the rubber tree
The tree that responds: taming the rubber tree
Abstract The starting point of this article is the assertion, common among tappers (or seringueiros) in plantations in the interior of São Paulo, that it is necessary to tame rubbe...
NEW BEDFORD, MASSACHUSETTS, MARCH 6, 1983-MARCH 22, 1984:
NEW BEDFORD, MASSACHUSETTS, MARCH 6, 1983-MARCH 22, 1984:
Following the highly publicized New Bedford rape case, in which a young woman was raped by several men on a pool table in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on March 6, 1983, a segment of...
Art in the bark: Indigenous carved boab trees (Adansonia gregorii) in north-west Australia
Art in the bark: Indigenous carved boab trees (Adansonia gregorii) in north-west Australia
Found only in a restricted area of north-west Australia, the Australian boab (Adansonia gregorii) is recognisable by its massive, bottle-shaped trunk, and is an economically import...

Recent Results


Back to Top