The Union Buries Its Dead - Henry Lawson
The Union Buries Its Dead - Henry Lawson
The Union Buries Its Dead - Henry Lawson
Dead
by
Henry Lawson
Context
"The Union Buries Its Dead" is a short story by Henry Lawson in which a young
man drowns while fording his horses in the river. The story describes the funeral
procession in the Outback for the young man who, though a stranger in town, is
nevertheless given a funeral because he was a fellow union laborer. Lawson
uses the story to satirize the overly romanticized "bush life" and the Union's
commitment to respecting its members.
Angus and Robertson published the story in the collection While the Billy Boils
in 1896.
Class Divisions:
Religious Devotion:
Community VS Strangers:
8
How has Lawson broken down romantic notions of the bush in his short
story ‘The Union Buries its Dead’? Provide quotes to support your
thesis.
Begin with:
What has Lawson done within the structure of the short story -
9
How has Henry Lawson affirmed or challenged
cultural stereotypes?
Begin by asking yourself what stereotypes have
been depicted by Lawson within his short stories.
Have they been positively conveyed and if so,
where?
Have they been negatively conveyed and if so,
where?
10
A retelling of
the story
The Union Buries its Dead
11