While everybody’s
proudly displaying the flag and eating damper and lamingtons, racing ferries up
and down the harbour, hurling frozen chooks at Watson’s Bay, celebrating en-masse
two-hundred and twenty-six years of nationhood (or one-hundred and fourteen and
a bit, if you’re being pedantic), I’ve put together a list of a cross-section
of books, films and pieces of music which encapsulate what my Australia is, how
I see the nation and our chequered history.
Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts
26/01/2014
19/01/2014
Lest we forget: Sydney Festival’s Black Diggers
Every so often a
theatre production stands head and shoulders above everything else, a
production that stands out as a landmark event because of its social and
cultural significance, because of it’s bearing on the shaping of Australia ’s
national psyche. Sydney Theatre Company’s The
Secret River was perhaps such a production. Now, a year later, Sydney
Festival and Queensland Theatre Company, in association with the Balnaves
Foundation, present Black
Diggers, an ambitious and monumentally affecting production which
shines a long-overdue light on the contribution of Aboriginal soldiers in the
Great War.
Like The Secret River, Black Diggers comes at
a time when we, as a nation, must face the past and learn from it, when we must
acknowledge the contribution people have played in the shaping of the country
we know today. Directed by Wesley Enoch, we follow the stories of several archetypal
figures as they travel from their homelands to the battlefields of Gallipoli,
the Middle East , and the Western Front. Far from
being jingoistic or representative, the result is an engrossing, harrowing and
emotionally charged one-hundred minutes of unavoidably powerful theatre that
does not shy away from the ugly truths of war and its legacy.
30/03/2012
On Reading, Part Two
I suppose I should continue on from the first post; it’s no use having a part one without a part two or three. While I may be writing my Honours thesis, reading is like my keep-sane, my distraction, my sleep-inducer at days’ end; I can’t recall the number of times I’ve fallen asleep with a book open on my face or woken to find it splayed open on the floor beside my bed like the carcass of some wond’rous beast.
The first book of note this time around is The Children’s Bach, by Helen Garner. I’d heard things about her earlier book Monkey Grip, in that it was meant to be a classic and all that (Penguin recently republished it as one of their modern classics in their iconic orange-and-white covers), but compared to her later book, Monkey Grip was empty, a constant cycling of same-old same-old. The Children’s Bach is entrancing from the outset – using the idea of a book of music as the loosest of frameworks, what you end up with is a series of linked vignettes, rhapsodies on a theme of life if you will, and they are as elegant, as mundane, as heart-warmingly extraordinary in their ordinariness as they are in their rhythm and essence of human behaviour. The way Garner captures her characters’ eccentricities and mannerisms, the way you feel a part of their household sucks you into the story so seamlessly, is just magical. It's like a more intimate Cloudstreet – in that its scope isn't as rambling, but it's just as eccentric and acutely captured – as good as it in its own way, on its own strengths, on its own terms. Their conversations have an otherness to them, that they could be happening anywhere at any moment but they still seem extraordinary in their construction and phrasing; the images they conjure of the books’ inhabitants are just beautiful.
‘But I like the mother,’ said Poppy. ‘Athena’s perfect, isn’t she.’
‘Perfect - you reckon?’ said Philip.
‘The goddess of war,’ said Philip.
‘I didn't mean that perfect,’ said Poppy.
‘Of war and needlecraft,’ said Elizabeth . [p66]
Labels:
Anna Karenina,
books,
Helen Garner,
Nation,
rpm,
Shakespeare,
Terry Pratchett,
The Children's Bach
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