![]() ABR's Top Twenty Aussie novels of the 21st Century.Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022).Past whisperings Past whisperings Recently Popular Whisperings Sara Dowse on Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022) M-R on Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022).Grab the Lapels on Miles Franklin Award 2022 shortlist. ![]() Du Bois, “Strivings of the Negro People” (#Review) Liz Dexter on Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022).whisperinggums on Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022).Glen Hunting on Miles Franklin Award 2022 shortlist whisperinggums on Miles Franklin Award 2022 shortlist.Stephen Orr, Sincerely, Ethel Malley (#bookreview).Monday musings on Australian literature: Warm Winter Read.Monday musings on Australian literature: Frank Moorhouse (1938-2022).Sign me up! Subscribe to whisperings via RSSĬategories Categories Tags ABC Radio American writers ANZLitLovers ILW Asian literature Audiobooks Australian writers Autobiographies/Memoirs AWW Challenge 2012 AWW Challenge 2013 AWW Challenge 2014 AWW Challenge 2015 AWW Challenge 2016 AWW Challenge 2017 AWW Challenge 2018 AWW Challenge 2019 AWW Challenge 2020 AWW Challenge 2021 Biographies Bookgroups Book lists Bookselling Canberra Writers Festival Children's literature Christmas Classical music Coming of age novels COVID-19 Crime fiction Debut fiction Eco-literature Elizabeth Jolley English writers Eucalypts Farm literature Film adaptations First Nations Australia literature Griffyn Ensemble Gum trees Helen Garner Historical fiction History Holocaust literature Irma Gold Jane Austen Japan Japanese writers Journalists Juvenilia LGBTQIA literature Library of America Meanjin Migrant literature NAIDOC Week National Library of Australia Nature writing New releases Nigel Featherstone Non-fiction November Novellas Obituaries Poetry Publishers Publishing Racism Satire Shadow Man Asian Literary Prize 2011 Short stories Six degrees of separation Sydney Writers Festival Thea Astley Tournament of Books Translated works Travel writing War literature World War 2 Recent whisperings It’s fascinating to see what happened to the Gothic tradition in the second half of the 20th century (in, say, the work of Elizabeth Jolley) but that is a topic for another day. Who needed castle ghosts in this situation? This is not to say that the supernatural never appeared in Australian writing, but that this writing could, and often did, convey a Gothic sense of horror and dread through the concrete realities of 19th century Australian life. They had the forbidding Australian landscape, the threat of becoming lost in or being destroyed by that landscape, and the harsh unyielding authority of colonial male power. It tells the story of revenge against a cruel overseer of convicts … and explores the fine line between definitions of man and beast when cruelty and revenge become the modus operandi.ġ9th century Australian writers didn’t always need the supernatural to convey horror, evoke fear and portray disjunction between desire/hope and harsh reality. One of the tales, “The Pegging-Out of Overseer Franke”, is commonly included in Australian Gothic anthologies. I reviewed his Tales of the early days, a couple of years ago. Rosa Praed (who, like Ada Cambridge, is not as well known as she should be, which is something I have been planning to – and will – rectify).The following are just some of the authors whose writings are regularly included in Gothic anthologies or in discussions of an Australian Gothic tradition: Baynton 1892 (Presumed Public Domain, via Wikipedia)Ĭonsequently, many of Australia’s 19th century writers did incorporate the Gothic into their writing, and today I’ll list just few (but it will be little more than a list as I’ve been away the last two weekends and am playing catchup in pretty much every aspect of my life.)
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