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                  <text>This Collection examines literary medievalism from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. It traces an arc from the populist literary medievalism of the nineteenth century, through the more rarefied modernist turn of the mid-twentieth century, to the re-emergence of popular forms such as childrenâ€™s literature and fantasy since the 1980s. In this Collection you will find items relating to printed medievalist works and also to medievalism operating in print, for example in references to medieval events, people, and literature in nineteenth- and twentieth-century texts and dramatic works.</text>
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&#13;
â€˜The Australian Jubilee Peerage: A Detailed Scheme for the Institution of Various Long-Needed Australian Orders of Nobilityâ€™, The Bulletin, 25 June 1887</text>
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                <text>â€˜pedigree hunting,â€™ Australian politics, Britain, heraldry, honours, Jubilee, knight, knighthood, Livingston York Hopkins (1846-1927), Melbourne, nobility, peerage, politics, political figures, Queen Victoria, social mobility, Victoria, VIC, White Knight of Kerry</text>
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                <text>This full-page illustration by the Bulletinâ€™s American-born cartoonist Livingston Hopkins (aka â€˜Hopâ€™), pokes fun at some of Australiaâ€™s prominent political figures. The 25 June 1887 issue of the Bulletin reviewed Queen Victoriaâ€™s Golden Jubilee, and Hopâ€™s cartoon â€œlampooned the jubilee peerages that had been bestowedâ€ on the distant British outpost (Louise D'Arcens, Old Songs in the Timeless Land: Medievalism in Australian Literature 1840-1910, Turnhout: Brepols, 2011, p.21). It seems that Australians from all backgrounds and social milieu desired these honours from the British monarch: a search for long-forgotten (aka â€˜illustriousâ€™) forbears was relentlessly pursued by public figures, and the claiming of heraldic devices (if obtainable) was de rigueur. As a result, Burkeâ€™s Peerage was forced to devote two volumes in 1891 and 1895 to â€œColonial Gentryâ€ (D'Arcens, p.24). Hopâ€™s cartoon offered Bulletin readers a tongue-in-cheek selection of new honours, including â€˜The Order of P.G.â€™ to be â€œconferred only upon the old and true colonial aristocracyâ€ (Bulletin,p .18). â€œP.G.â€ is a reference to â€œthe convict inmates of Pinchgut, the notoriously punitive prison-island in Sydney Cove (better known today as Fort Denison)â€. It also serves as a timely reminder to those with â€˜blinkeredâ€™ memories â€œof the decidedly ignoble originsâ€ of many of the Colonyâ€™s original European settlers (Dâ€™Arcens, p.23). </text>
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                <text>The Bulletin</text>
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                <text>The Bulletin</text>
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                <text>25 June 1887 (p. 18).</text>
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