In his polemic 1968 Boyer Lecture, W.E.H. Stanner first introduced the term “Great Australian Silence” to expose the structural erasure of Aboriginal history from the Australian narrative, labelling a nationwide “cult of forgetfulness” to critique historians from the 1930s to the early 1960s. However, Stanner was not simply critiquing the omission of Aboriginal historiography, but the epistemology of Western historiography, calling for a reconfiguration of structures that had consigned Aboriginal people to one-dimensional historical narratives. Although later historians claimed the ‘Great Australian Silence’ had been ‘shattered’ through a proliferation of scholarly works, Stanner’s critique of fundamental form continues to raise questions about the nature and limits of history as a discipline. Can empirical history, deeply rooted in colonial Enlightenment traditions, ever fully accommodate perspectives that fall outside its epistemic apparatus? The genre of Western historiography, as linear, empirical and archive-driven, proves structurally ill-suited to the oral, place-based knowledge systems of Aboriginal people. To move beyond the silence, therefore, is not singularly a matter of inclusion, but methodological reimagining.
Part 1 of this essay examines Eleanor Dark’s The Timeless Land (1941) and Kate Grenville’s The Secret River (2005) to recognise the works that deployed historical fiction as a vehicle to reckon and empathetically reconstruct the ‘silence’. Emerging to contest conservative political landscapes, both authors strove to humanise the emotional dimensions of colonisation; however, in doing so, they risk enforcing a moral solipsism upon Indigenous voices, reinforcing the silences they sought to contest.
Powerfully preceding the conversation surrounding the epistemological constraints of empiricist history, Dark’s The Timeless Land acknowledges a suppressed Aboriginal perspective amidst an intellectual climate of Whiggish nationalism. Dark attempted to underscore the relational ethics and cultural collision of frontier contact within Australian historical consciousness. As Dark found herself “sickened” by the cultural complacency of the 1938 sesquicentenary celebrations, she sought to expose the moral void of colonial narratives while effacing their violent foundations. This critique, when positioned within the context of the 1938 Day of Mourning and protests against the regressive Aboriginals Amendment Act 1939, reveals her public stance against a political climate that sought to relegate Aboriginal voices. At the forefront, Dark’s historical fiction emerges as an important intervention into settler mythos and early articulation of cross-cultural contact, prematurely engaging with the ‘silences’ articulated in W.E.H. Stanner’s 1968 Boyer Lecture.
Appropriating W.E.H. Stanner’s metaphor of a “secret river of blood”, Kate Grenville’s The Secret River deliberately acted in response to the “Great Australian Silence” to directly challenge the distinct political terrain of the Howard era. Prime Minister John Howard, in rejecting the “fragmented stew of themes” taught in schools, called for a “balance sheet” of history, promoting an equilibrium of the past that resisted both overt glorification and condemnation of British colonial settlement. However, debate surrounding the novel emerged when prominent historian Mark McKenna examined Grenville’s narrative as both naïve and hubris-filled, defending history as a distinct discipline aside from literature within its scholarly rigour and empirical process. As McKenna cautioned, historical fiction risks becoming a space of “historical mythology”, within its privileging of emotional catharsis over historiographical complexity, a concern that underscores fiction’s potential to distort rather than illuminate historical silences. Thus, whilst Grenville’s work reanimates occluded historical experiences, it simultaneously provokes essential questions surrounding authority, representations, and the limits of narratives.
Navigating an empathetic reimagining of frontier contact, both Dark and Grenville suggested that when simultaneously underpinned by extensive archival evidence, historical fiction can operate in dialogue with empiricist historiography to articulate humanised experiences. Dark’s dual methodology engaged deeply with this understanding, seeking to ‘humanise’ Aboriginal frontier perspectives. Committing to historical veracity, she immersed herself in colonial accounts such as Watkin Tench’s A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay, excavating an anonymous report of Bennelong’s death, cited extensively by both historians and novelists ever since. Equally significant, her sustained dialogue with anthropological authorities A.P. Elkin, Phyllis Kaberry, and Daisy Bates enabled Dark to approach Aboriginal histories with greater sensitivity, Acknowledging the limitations of her perspective, admitting she felt “increasingly conscious” of her “abysmal ignorance”, Dark’s historical fiction works to operate within the evidentiary realm of historiography, despite simultaneously seeking to recover Indigenous experiences through narrative imagination. Contrastingly, Dark’s re-enactment of the 1789 Dawes expedition to viscerally connect with the land she was representing, ingrained an empathetic methodology within her approach to represent the Frontier experience fully. Rather than freely inserting imagination into archival absences, Dark’s fusion of experimental and archival engagement reveals a conscientious attempt to reconcile with empiricist methodologies. While she openly denied any “claim to strict historical accuracy”, her methodology enables the novel to act as a valid historical intervention that acknowledges fiction’s capacity to ethically amplify Indigenous perspectives.
Moreover, The Secret River emerges as a continuation of the experimental methodologies employed by Dark, however, favouring a humanisation of the ethical complexities of colonisation. Underscoring her central inquiry, “What would I have done in that situation?”, Grenville reveals her desire to inhabit and portray the settler consciousness of her ancestor, Solomon Wiseman, offering readers another way to interact with histories left unexamined. Writing not to compete with professional historians “battling… about the details”, Grenville offered what she describes as an empathetic and imaginative understanding of frontier contact, positioning historical fiction as a complementary lens to more traditional forms of historical knowledge. Whilst her research is grounded in 18th and 19th-century sources, including newspapers and letters,18 she sacrificed direct, empirical accuracy, taking inspiration from original letters from Governor Phillip, and amalgamated various frontier massacres to construct an emotionally resonant account of colonial violence. Her experimental methods, such as ferry rides across the Hawkesbury River, allowed her to emotionally connect with the region’s historical geography and settler journeys, reflecting her belief that such imaginative techniques can articulate the silenced human dimensions of Australia’s past.
Whilst this empathetic lens humanises the emotional dimensions of colonisation, it simultaneously generates ethical tension in the representation of Indigenous voices. Inga Clenninden warns that this “unexamined confidence in empathy” risks reducing past perspectives of the past to contemporary, producing an ethical solipsism that renders those historical subjects who do not conform to modern values as inhuman. Dark’s inscription of an Aboriginal perspective, despite rigorous archival and anthropological consultation, threatens to overstep ethical boundaries in representing Aboriginal voices from a white settler lens. Moreover, Grenville’s omission of a direct Indigenous perspective furthers the critical reflection surrounding the extent to which white authors can fulfil the ‘silence’ of Indigenous experience. This ultimately represents the central limitations of historiography itself: whose story gets told, and by whom? Although empirical history within its objective constraints may seemingly escape these ethical boundaries, Dirk van Rens’ syntheses that academic history is “hardly different from historical fiction”, sharing narrative form, authorial purpose, and ideological framing. Therefore, by similarly constructing the past through fragments, omissions and interpretations, empirical history can also be viewed as bound by the same representational dilemmas that historical fiction instead makes visible. It is within its acknowledged subjectivity that historical fiction enters the space of historiographical metafiction. As Bain Attwood conceptualises, this genre does not naïvely substitute history but exposes the fallible construction of historical knowledge. While this genre, inhabited by both Dark and Grenville, fails to provide an objective view of history, it reveals the silences, contradictions and imaginative possibilities within history’s narrative. Thus, for historical fiction to function ethically within the reconstruction of the past, it must remain self-aware of the power it holds to shape collective memory.
Through examining these works, ultimately, it can be concluded that fiction cannot substitute empirical historiography; it nonetheless provides a provocation to reconsider the structural limitations of Enlightenment-derived historiographical paradigms, which have long struggled to address the enduring legacies of the “Great Australian Silence”. However, it is also important to recognise that empathetically reconstructed, white-written narratives lack the epistemological apparatus of Indigenous knowledge systems that can work to fulfil the deeply multifaceted ‘silence’. In this way, The Secret River and The Timeless Land demonstrate the need for empathetic reimagination as essential in exposing the representational limits of empirical historiography and thus offer new ways of reckoning with Australia’s ‘silent’ past