Y09W18RC Country, Place, Identity

The way a writer describes a place reveals far more than geography — it reveals who is looking, what they carry with them, and what the land means to the people connected to it. This excerpt gives you practice in analysing how descriptive choices shape the reader's sense of both place and identity, and in inferring the viewpoint embedded in a character's way of seeing. As you read, pay attention to the details the writer chooses to include — and consider what those choices tell you about the person experiencing them.

Literary — Historical fiction excerpt

A historical fiction excerpt is a passage taken from a longer work of fiction set in a real period of the past, where invented characters move through historically grounded settings and circumstances. Writers use this form literarily — to explore human experience, perspective, and identity through storytelling that is rooted in a particular time and place, rather than to record historical facts directly. Historical fiction typically combines sensory description of setting, characterisation through action and dialogue, and a narrative voice that filters the world through a specific perspective; it is usually structured around a moment or encounter that reveals something about the characters or their situation rather than summarising events. Unlike a history text, it is not making factual claims — it is constructing an experience for the reader to inhabit. Your job as a reader is to enter that experience attentively: tracking how the setting is described, whose perspective is shaping those descriptions, and what the narrative choices reveal about belonging, identity, and place.

Before You Read

  • Read the context box carefully before you begin the excerpt — it gives you essential background about the characters and setting that will shape how you interpret the descriptive choices in the passage itself.
  • Think about how the same place can feel completely different depending on who is experiencing it and what history they carry with them — a familiar street feels different to someone who grew up there than to someone arriving for the first time.
  • The text includes a brief perspective note at the end — treat it as a reading lens rather than a conclusion, and consider how it might change what you notice when you go back over the excerpt.

While You Read

  • As you read the excerpt, track which details belong to the landscape itself and which are filtered through a character's emotional state — the distinction between what is observed and how it is felt is central to how this kind of writing constructs identity.
  • Pay attention to moments where a character's language reveals their relationship to place — notice whether their words carry a sense of familiarity, distance, wonder, or something more layered, and consider what that implies about their connection to the land.
  • When dialogue appears, read it alongside the surrounding description rather than separately — in historical fiction, what characters say and where they say it are often inseparable, and the setting is doing as much work as the words.
  • Re-read any sentence where the description feels unexpectedly precise or unusually compressed — these are often the moments where the writer's representational choices are most deliberate and most worth examining.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice how the two characters in the excerpt experience the same physical landscape differently — pay attention to the specific descriptive details each perspective generates, and consider what those differences reveal about the relationship between identity and place.
  • Observe the moments where the writing describes something belonging to the land's longer history — pay attention to how that history is referenced and what that choice of framing suggests about whose connection to country the text is acknowledging.
  • Pay attention to the final impression the excerpt leaves — consider whether the sense of belonging or displacement it conveys is resolved, complicated, or deliberately left open, and what that ending choice suggests about the theme of identity and place.

Now read

The historical fiction excerpt

~3 min read · ~465 words

Under the Same Sky (Excerpt)

CONTEXT

This excerpt is from an original work of historical fiction set in rural New South Wales in the early 1950s. The story follows Mara, a twelve-year-old girl whose family has recently arrived from Europe, and her growing friendship with Ellie, whose family has farmed the same land for generations. This passage takes place during Mara’s first week at a new school in a small country town.

The school was one building and one room, and it smelled of chalk dust and something older — timber that had been warmed by too many summers to count. Mara stood at the door for a moment before anyone noticed her. Through the window behind the teacher’s desk, she could see a long paddock running out to a line of grey-green eucalypts, their trunks pale against the morning sky.

The teacher, Mr Aldous, pointed to a spare desk near the back. Mara walked to it without speaking. She understood most of what was said to her, but the sounds still arrived slightly out of order, like letters shuffled in an envelope. She sat down and arranged her pencils in the groove along the top of the desk and tried to look as though she had always been there.

The girl beside her had dark eyes and short hair and was watching Mara with open, unceremonious curiosity — the kind that didn’t pretend not to stare. She passed Mara a folded piece of paper. Inside, in careful printing: My name is Ellie. What’s yours?

Mara wrote back: Mara. I am from Yugoslavia. Then she crossed out Yugoslavia and wrote: From far away.

At lunch, Ellie led her out to the side of the building where the shade fell in the afternoon and the older kids never went. They sat on the dry grass and Ellie pointed to the ridge of hills in the distance.

My grandfather was born out there, she said. And his grandfather before him, and before that, this country belonged to other people who knew it better than any of us ever will. She said it simply, without elaboration, as though it were a thing already understood and only needed to be said aloud.

Mara looked at the hills. They were unfamiliar and immense — larger, somehow, than hills ought to be — and yet something in the way Ellie spoke made her feel less like an outsider and more like someone who had just arrived in a story that was already being told.

PERSPECTIVE NOTE

This excerpt filters the setting through Mara’s experience of displacement — her observations are precise but slightly estranged, shaped by a perspective that is seeing this landscape for the first time. Ellie’s speech, by contrast, is rooted: her words carry a sense of long continuity with the land and its history.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

unceremonious adj.
direct and unguarded; without social pretence or formality
elaboration n.
further explanation or detail added to make something clearer or fuller
immense adj.
extraordinarily large, in a way that exceeds ordinary expectation
estranged adj.
made unfamiliar; experiencing a sense of distance from one's surroundings
continuity n.
an unbroken connection across time; the quality of lasting without interruption