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Eleanor
Dark (1901-1985), novelist, was born on 26 August l901 at Burwood,
Sydney, daughter of Eleanor Grace (born McCulloch) and Dowell O'Reilly,
poet and Labour politician. She was educated at Redlands, Sydney,
and attended secretarial college before being employed as a stenographer
in a legal office. On 1 February 1922 she married Eric Payten Dark,
medical practitioner, and from 1923 lived at Katoomba except for
the years 1951-57 when the Darks spent part of each year at Montville,
Queensland. There was a stepson, John Oliver, and a son to the marriage,
Brian Michael, born in 1929.
Her writing first appeared in Redlander, her school magazine;
she also published in the Australian Women's Mirror, the
Bulletin and other magazines using 'P.O'R.' (Pixie O'Reilly)
and Patricia O'Rane. Her novels were published under her married
name: Slow Dawning (1932), Prelude to Christopher
(1934), Return to Coolami (1936), Sun Across the Sky
(1937), Waterway (1938), The Timeless Land (1941),
The Little Company (1945) Storm of Time (1948) and
No Barrier (1953). The early novels (except Prelude to
Christopher) were published first in London. They later appeared
in Australian editions. Her work were published in the United States
(The Timeless Land won Book of the Month Club selection),
and in translation in France, Germany, Italy and Sweden. Lantana
Lane, a loosely linked collection of stories of rural Queensland,
appeared in 1959. She wrote scripts and broadcast for the ABC on
history and literature. She won the Australian Literature Society
gold medal in 1934 and 1936, the Australian Society of Women Writers'
Alice award in 1978 and was awarded AO in 1977.
Eleanor Dark was privileged as a writer by a long and close relationship
with Eric Dark which provided intellectual companionship, and financial,
moral, and practical support for her writing. Although she said
'My books have been written at intervals snatched from years as
a housewife', she had some domestic help and the boys went to boarding
school. Their Katoomba home, 'Varuna', which she designed, had a
separate writing room in the garden. She was socially committed
and believed that writers should give 'a reflection, and perhaps
an interpretation, of themselves and their community . . . a literature
is as essential to the living growth of a people as agriculture
or industry or sport'. The Darks were supporters of left-wing causes
and though neither joined the Communist Party, they were attacked
as Communists in the 1940s. She was always a private person and
in later life withdrew from public and social life, disappointed
with political and social directions in Australia during the 1950s.
In her last years ill health and a habit of seclusion meant that
she saw very few people and rarely left the house. She died in September
1985.
Eleanor Dark wrote fiction that expressed her socialist and feminist
concerns. She used modernist techniques, including interior monologue
and multiple character narration, to explore political and social
themes: the role of women, class, spiritual versus technological
progress, and war. Many of her concerns preshadow those of more
recent feminist writing. Her best-known work is The Timeless
Land, an historical novel, in which she presents history from
the point of view of the Aboriginal people and the settlement of
Australia as invasion. It was made into an ABC television series
in 1980, much condensed, and with the radical thrust removed.
'For almost twenty years . . . the best-selling serious novelist
in Australia', Eleanor Dark was largely neglected from the 1960s.
Virago has recently republished Prelude to Christopher, The
Little Company and Lantana Lane.
Barbara Brooks and Judith Clark
Drusilla Modjeska 'Eleanor Dark: Retrospective' Refractory Girl
no 29 1986.
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