Linked by the histories, geographies, and legacies of 'imperial desire', the countries and peoples of the southern hemisphere have long been shaped by their approximate otherness. 1 Defined and redefined by shifting European cartographic visions of unknown and unknowable lands inspiring exploration, discovery, conquest, and colonisation from at least the sixteenth century onwards, the qualities of distance and difference ascribed to those southern topographies by a northern gaze have more recently been remapped on to the south as an 'indexical category' and conceptual space. 2 No longer characterised solely or necessarily by hemispheric location, this south is perceived as the antithesis or antimony to the north's modernity, as belated, inverted, nugatory, and even pathological in its relation to the time/space coordinates exported by Euro-American capital and territorial expansion. 3 Whether the American South, the Mediterranean South, or the Global South, the south is nearly always an 'uncanny temporal figure', implying a vertical hierarchy of 'above and below' and 'centrality and marginality' based on the apparently normative qualities of 'free-market democracy, modernity and its absence'. 4 As Harry Harootunian reminds us, this unevenness within the global field is not an incidental or temporary condition but rather a functional outcome of a long history of imperialist and/or neo-imperialist capitalist accumulation, requiring us to reinstate the 'mixed temporalities' and 'historical uncanny' that have been 'written over' by histories of nation statehood, modernity, and globalisation. 5 Nowhere have these progressive, familiarising strategies been more apparent than in the literary histories and national canons of the historically 'British' southern settler colonies of Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, where enduring myths of Anglo-Saxon cultural exceptionalism and national self-containment have persistently overwritten the uncomfortable legacies and enduring realities of settler colonialism. 6 Driven by the rise of Black Consciousness, Indigenous activism, and anti-racism movements, revisionary scholarship in multiple disciplines over the last fifty years has