'There's a Black Boy Dead and a Migloo Holding a Gun': Death, Aboriginality and History in Australian Adolescent Literature

Authors

  • Kathryn James Deakin University, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2009vol19no1art1153

Keywords:

Australian Aboriginal people, imperialism, patriarchy, racism, capitalism, Melissa Lucashenko, Killing Darcy, Gary Crew, No Such Country, Poison Under Their Lips, Mark Svendsen, colonialism

Abstract

In 'Preying on the past: Contexts of some recent neo-historical fiction', Peter Pierce argues that, over the last five or so decades, Australian historical fiction has turned away from 'unconstrained and idealistic affirmations about Australia's future' to empathise instead with those figures in the historical landscape who were previously marginalised: 'victims of imperialism, patriarchy, racism, capitalism' (1992, p.307). This trend is particularly applicable to historical literature for younger readers, which now often tries to renegotiate history by providing a counterpoint to the metanarratives of the past (Stephens 2003, xii-xiii). Reflecting and responding to developments in the disciplines of historiography and, more generally, the humanities, texts in this genre are representative of the attempt to interrogate monolithic versions of Australian history - often called the 'three cheers' view - in which positivity, achievement and the peaceful settlement of the nation are key themes. At issue in these novels is thus the redressing of past wrongs, particularly with respects to the violent aspects of colonisation when so many members of the Indigenous population either died or were forcibly displaced. Each of the three adolescent novels I focus upon in this paper - Melissa Lucashenko's 'Killing Darcy' (1998), Gary Crew's 'No Such Country' (1991) and Mark Svendsen's 'Poison Under Their Lips' (2001) - is equally idiosyncratic in its approach to narrativising Australia's problematic colonial past.

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Author Biography

  • Kathryn James, Deakin University, Australia

    Kathryn James teaches children’s literature at Deakin University, Melbourne. Her doctoral research, from which this article is drawn, focused upon representations of death in fictions for the young adult audience. She has made several contributions to Papers: Explorations into Children’ s Literature, and she is the author of Death, Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Adolescent Literature (2009, Routledge). Her publications have also appeared in Children’s Literature in Education and New Talents 21C.

References

Bradford, C (2001) Reading Race: Aboriginality in Australian Children's Literature. Melbourne, Melbourne University Press.

Bradford, C (2003) ‘Transformative fictions: Postcolonial encounters in Australian texts’, Children's Literature Association Quarterly 28,4: 195-202.

Bradford, C (2004). ‘Memory, history, dystopia: No Such Country and Secrets of Walden Rising’. Paper presented at the 5th International Utopian Studies Society conference, University of Porto, Portugal, 9 July.

Bradford, C (2007) Unsettling Narratives: Postcolonial Readings of Children's Literature. Waterloo, ON, Wilfrid Laurier University Press.

Bronfen, E (1992) Over Her Dead Body: Death, Femininity and the Aesthetic. Manchester, Manchester University Press.

Crew, G (1991) No Such Country. Port Melbourne, William Heinemann.

Doane, MA (1991) Femmes Fatales: Feminism, Film Theory, Psychoanalysis. New York, Routledge.

Gandhi, L (1998) Postcolonial Theory: A Critical Introduction. Sydney, Allen & Unwin.

Hutcheon, L (1988) A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction. New York, Routledge.

Lucashenko, M (1998) Killing Darcy. St Lucia, University of Queensland Press.

McCallum, R (1999) Ideologies of Identity in Adolescent Fiction: The Dialogic Construction of Subjectivity. New York, Garland.

McKenna, B & Pearce, S (1999) Strange Journeys: The Works of Gary Crew. Sydney, Hodder Headline.

Mills, A (1998) ‘Writing on the edge: Gary Crew's fiction’, Papers: Explorations into Children's Literature 8,3: 25-35.

Pierce, P (1992) ‘Preying on the past: Contexts of some recent neo-historical fiction’, Australian Literary Studies 15,4: 304-312.

Robert, H (2001) ‘Disciplining the female Aboriginal body: Inter-racial sex and the pretence of separation, Australian Feminist Studies 16,34: 69-81.

Stephens, J (2003) ‘Editor's introduction: Always facing the issues--preoccupations in Australian children's literature’, The Lion and the Unicorn 27,2: v-xvii.

Stephens, J & McCallum, R (1998) Retelling Stories, Framing Culture: Traditional Story and Metanarratives in Children's Literature. New York, Garland.

Svendsen, M (2001) Poison Under Their Lips. Port Melbourne, Lothian.

Trites, RS (2000) Disturbing the Universe: Power and Repression in Adolescent Literature. Iowa, University of Iowa Press.

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Published

2009-01-01

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

“’There’s a Black Boy Dead and a Migloo Holding a Gun’: Death, Aboriginality and History in Australian Adolescent Literature” (2009) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 19(1), pp. 5–16. doi:10.21153/pecl2009vol19no1art1153.

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