Travelling to Tomorrow: Australian Women in the United States, 1910-1960
Abstract
‘I always find a visit to the United States exhilarating,’
wrote Dorothy Jenner in her autobiography. ‘They are light
years ahead of us, sometimes on the wrong foot, but more often on
the right one.’ For this Sydney-born actress and journalist,
who visited America on five occasions between 1915 and 1967,
venturing across the Pacific was not just a physical journey but
an exercise in time travel, an opportunity to launch herself into
a new and better world to come. An unorthodox but far from unique
figure, Jenner was one of thousands of twentieth-century
Australian women who headed abroad in search of wider horizons
but chose to deviate from the well-worn path to London.
Travelling instead to the United States, they pursued study, work
and adventure in a nation that many, like Jenner, saw as charging
ahead along an imagined highway into the future.
This thesis tells the story of these transnational Australians
and positions them as actors in the development of Australian-US
relations. Drawing upon correspondence, diaries, oral history,
periodicals, travel writing and institutional archives, it argues
that such travellers were among the greatest beneficiaries and
most zealous agents of Australian engagement with the United
States throughout the first half of the twentieth century. During
an era in which few Australians moved outside the British world,
America’s modernity—and, in particular, its modern gender
relations—drew career-minded women to its shores and offered
them persuasive evidence that the American model was worthy of
emulation. Part of a growing body of scholarship concerned with
Australia’s engagements with the Asia-Pacific region, these
findings illuminate the density of transpacific ties during an
era of sustained imperial sentiment, and point to a significant
but little recognised gendered dimension to the turn towards the
United States. At the same time, this research speaks to the
emergent reorientation of transnational American history towards
the Pacific world, demonstrating that the US-Asian connections
highlighted in recent scholarship were accompanied by myriad
interactions with the Antipodes.
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