From missionary wife to superintendent: Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions

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Standard

From missionary wife to superintendent : Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions. / McLisky, Claire Louise.

I: Journal of Australian Studies, Bind 39, Nr. 1, 3, 17.04.2015, s. 32-43.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

McLisky, CL 2015, 'From missionary wife to superintendent: Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions', Journal of Australian Studies, bind 39, nr. 1, 3, s. 32-43.

APA

McLisky, C. L. (2015). From missionary wife to superintendent: Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions. Journal of Australian Studies, 39(1), 32-43. [3].

Vancouver

McLisky CL. From missionary wife to superintendent: Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions. Journal of Australian Studies. 2015 apr. 17;39(1):32-43. 3.

Author

McLisky, Claire Louise. / From missionary wife to superintendent : Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions. I: Journal of Australian Studies. 2015 ; Bind 39, Nr. 1. s. 32-43.

Bibtex

@article{8daade8220fa4f83a195c573323a5346,
title = "From missionary wife to superintendent: Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions",
abstract = "This article considers the work of Janet Matthews, an independent and non-denominational Protestant missionary, at the Maloga, Metco and Manunka Missions, all located on the Murray River (the first in New South Wales and the latter two in South Australia). While Maloga was founded and subsequently run as a joint undertaking, Janet was the primary founder and sole director at both Metco and Manunka, making her one of the first women to run an Australian mission entirely on her own. As such, the Maloga, Metco and Manunka archives constitute a useful resource for examining the different opportunities and obstacles associated with a transition into the role of the independent female missionary. Janet's management and representation of the missions, her relationships with Aboriginal people and their perceptions of her and her connections to local settlers and the settler-colonial state are all considered, first in the context of her partnership with her husband Daniel at Maloga, then during her period of transition at Metco, and finally in her solo work at Manunka after his death in 1902 until her retirement in 1911.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, mission history, gender history, Aboriginal history",
author = "McLisky, {Claire Louise}",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
day = "17",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "32--43",
journal = "Journal of Australian Studies",
issn = "1444-3058",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - From missionary wife to superintendent

T2 - Janet Matthews on three independent Murray River Missions

AU - McLisky, Claire Louise

PY - 2015/4/17

Y1 - 2015/4/17

N2 - This article considers the work of Janet Matthews, an independent and non-denominational Protestant missionary, at the Maloga, Metco and Manunka Missions, all located on the Murray River (the first in New South Wales and the latter two in South Australia). While Maloga was founded and subsequently run as a joint undertaking, Janet was the primary founder and sole director at both Metco and Manunka, making her one of the first women to run an Australian mission entirely on her own. As such, the Maloga, Metco and Manunka archives constitute a useful resource for examining the different opportunities and obstacles associated with a transition into the role of the independent female missionary. Janet's management and representation of the missions, her relationships with Aboriginal people and their perceptions of her and her connections to local settlers and the settler-colonial state are all considered, first in the context of her partnership with her husband Daniel at Maloga, then during her period of transition at Metco, and finally in her solo work at Manunka after his death in 1902 until her retirement in 1911.

AB - This article considers the work of Janet Matthews, an independent and non-denominational Protestant missionary, at the Maloga, Metco and Manunka Missions, all located on the Murray River (the first in New South Wales and the latter two in South Australia). While Maloga was founded and subsequently run as a joint undertaking, Janet was the primary founder and sole director at both Metco and Manunka, making her one of the first women to run an Australian mission entirely on her own. As such, the Maloga, Metco and Manunka archives constitute a useful resource for examining the different opportunities and obstacles associated with a transition into the role of the independent female missionary. Janet's management and representation of the missions, her relationships with Aboriginal people and their perceptions of her and her connections to local settlers and the settler-colonial state are all considered, first in the context of her partnership with her husband Daniel at Maloga, then during her period of transition at Metco, and finally in her solo work at Manunka after his death in 1902 until her retirement in 1911.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - mission history

KW - gender history

KW - Aboriginal history

M3 - Journal article

VL - 39

SP - 32

EP - 43

JO - Journal of Australian Studies

JF - Journal of Australian Studies

SN - 1444-3058

IS - 1

M1 - 3

ER -

ID: 137471228