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Nettie
Palmer 1885 - 1964 critic
Janet
Gertrude Palmer (1885-1964), critic, was born on 18 August 1885
at Sandhurst (Bendigo), Victoria, only daughter of Catherine (born
MacDonald) and John Higgins, accountant. Her brother Esmonde was
eleven years her junior. Nettie started writing early, in part to
define her own spiritual existence in revolt against her parents'
austere Baptist faith. Her education began at home with her mother
and continued at Miss Rudd's seminary, Malvern, and the Presbyterian
Ladies' College. She graduated from the University of Melbourne,
BA with third class honours in classical and comparative philology
and Dip Ed 1909, MA 1912. Through her involvement in student and
literary circles she met Bernard O'Dowd, who shaped her commitment
to socialism and cultural nationalism. In 1910-11 she studied for
the Diploma of the International Phonetics Association in Europe.
Influenced by the works of Tolstoy, G. B. Shaw and Henri Bergson,
she participated on the fringes of the suffrage movement and, with
Vance Palmer, in guild socialism. Back in Melbourne she taught modern
languages and began to write seriously for the socialist press.
She travelled to London to marry Vance on 23 May 1914 and they went
to Brittany. In 1915 they returned to London, where Aileen was born.
Nettie published two volumes of poetry. They returned to Victoria,
living at Emerald. Helen (q.v.) was born in 1917. The Palmers were
outspoken opponents of censorship and conscription. Nettie had a
regular column in the Argus and with Christian Jollie Smith
(q.v.) edited a collection of essays by E. J. Villers. After Vance
enlisted she lived with her aunt, suffragist Ina Higgins, and taught
privately. Reunited with Vance at Emerald she taught her daughters.
They moved in 1925 to Caloundra, Queensland, and in 1929 back to
Melbourne. After a miscarriage in 1926 and believing she would have
no more children, Nettie felt 'forced into the preoccupation with
outside matters which is usually the affair of women who have lived
their life and finished it'.
Nettie played a seminal role in establishing the canons of Australian
cultural criticism. After publication of Modern Australian Literature
1900-1923 (1924), she had many more outlets, notably in the
Illustrated Tasmanian Mail, the Brisbane Courier,
All About Books, and the Bulletin Red Page. Her lively
correspondence established a network of contact and encouragement
between many Australian and some overseas writers. An Australian
Story-Book (1928) set standards for the short story. She published
Henry Bourne Higgins (1931); her essays were included in
Talking It Over (1932); she co-edited The Centenary Gift
Book (1934). Nettie was active in the Australian Literary Society,
the Verse- Speaking Association and later in the Fellowship of Australian
Writers. Her contribution to the modest Palmer income was vital.
In 1930s the struggle against fascism and for peace became her major
concern. She attended the International Congress of Writers for
the Defence of Culture, was a member of the Spanish Relief Committee,
with whom she published several booklets, and the Joint Spanish
Aid Council. She was Melbourne editor of Women Today, an
anti-fascist journal for women, and a member of the International
Refugee Emergency Committee. She taught English and was 'a guiding
angel' to refugees. From the 1940s her self-professed role was that
of 'liaison officer in literary life': she edited memoirs, published
collected poems and short stories, wrote introductions and made
translations, continuing to write, lecture and encourage younger
writers. In 1948 Meanjin published Fourteen Years: Extracts
from a Private Journal 1925-1939, regarded by many as her most
important work. Henry Handel Richardson appeared in 1950
and Bernard O'Dowd in 1954. All her books are now out of
print. Much of her later life was spent caring for relatives. She
died on 19 October 1964.
Most writers found her supportive and her criticism stimulating
though a few regarded her as patronising. 'She was lovable and dedicated,
passionate and impulsive, at times absent-minded, even eccentric'.
Nettie placed little value on domestic labour and was an untidy
housekeeper. While she subsumed her creative talents and early feminism
to support of her husband and the cause of a national culture and
political freedom her work and life was a courageous endeavour to
embody her ideals. A. D. Hope praised her 'intellectual toughness':
she was 'a really professional writer in the European sense'.
Deborah Jordan
Drusilla Modjeska Exiles at Home l981.
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