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AbstractHistoryArchive Description
'Australia's centre and north are a world apart from its big coastal cities. Here one finds unique natural wonders, visionary art, original thinkers and, sometimes, distilled despair and death.
In Journeys to the Interior, Nicolas Rothwell travels deep into the northern realm, combining the storytelling flair and persistence of a journalist with the imagination of an artist
Following on from the acclaimed Another Country, this book contains haunting and perceptive portraits, of, among others, Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, Ian Fairweather, Noel Pearson and Galarrwuy Yunupingu. There are explorations of the natural world - of pythons, desert oaks and magpie geese. And there are wonderful introductions to the art and artists that bring the northern landscape to life and transform it, whether through painting, dance or photography.' (From the publisher's website.)
Notes
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Dedication: IN MEMORY OF IAN WARD
Born in 1962 in the Gibson Desert, died 27 January 2008
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Epigraph: Have the gates of death been opened unto thee? Or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death?
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Other Formats
- Large print.
Works about this Work
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Ethics of Representation and Self-reflexivity : Nicolas Rothwell’s Narrative Essays
2020
single work
criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 20 no. 2 2020;'While many contemporary Australian writers pitch their narratives on the coastal fringes, where most Australians reside, Nicolas Rothwell returns obsessively to the interior where one senses a sense of unfinished business. The spatial instabilities that resulted from the settler colonial project act as a catalyst for unsettling prior forms of knowledge and belief. Rothwell’s works feature real-and-imagined characters caught between fiction and non-fiction, the lies in the land and the lie of the land. His narratives create a form of generic disorientation that has a political, social and epistemological purpose. Central to Rothwell’s literary project is the reminder that spatial representations influence spatial practices. The author advocates for a break from the novelistic tradition; the country has seen enough literary and legal fictions that had catastrophic consequences for the native population and the environment.
'I argue that Rothwell’s spatial and literary renegotiations culminate in the formation of a new literary genre, the narrative essay. The author decolonises place, space and literary forms to articulate ethical models of non-belonging. Rothwell offers a transformative sublime aesthetics that I analyse as an expression of Bill Ashcroft’s ‘horizonal sublime’ and Christopher Hitt’s ‘ecological sublime’. I compare Rothwell’s ethics of representation, characterised by a self-reflexive prose, narrative instability and narrative regression, to that of Anglo-German author W.G. Sebald, who uses similar techniques in his evocation of a ruined Europe. Rothwell not only presents man’s propensity for a ‘Natural History of Destruction’, he is also intent on identifying the mechanisms at work in building the future.' (Publication abstract)
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Untitled
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: Transnational Literature , May vol. 2 no. 2 2010;
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Cover Notes
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sunday Age , 28 February 2010; (p. 21)
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Fear and Exaltation in Northern Wilderness
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 13-14 February 2010; (p. 28-29)
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Books
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The West Australian , 30 January 2010; (p. 26)
— Review of Symbols of Australia 2009 anthology essay ; Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay
-
Non-Fiction Books
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The Courier-Mail , 2 - 3 Jan 2010; (p. 19)
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Books
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The West Australian , 30 January 2010; (p. 26)
— Review of Symbols of Australia 2009 anthology essay ; Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Fear and Exaltation in Northern Wilderness
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 13-14 February 2010; (p. 28-29)
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Cover Notes
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sunday Age , 28 February 2010; (p. 21)
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
Untitled
2010
single work
review
— Appears in: Transnational Literature , May vol. 2 no. 2 2010;
— Review of Journeys to the Interior 2010 selected work essay -
The Beautiful Unknowable North
2010
single work
column
— Appears in: The Adelaide Review , January no. 359 2010; (p. 6-7) -
Ethics of Representation and Self-reflexivity : Nicolas Rothwell’s Narrative Essays
2020
single work
criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 20 no. 2 2020;'While many contemporary Australian writers pitch their narratives on the coastal fringes, where most Australians reside, Nicolas Rothwell returns obsessively to the interior where one senses a sense of unfinished business. The spatial instabilities that resulted from the settler colonial project act as a catalyst for unsettling prior forms of knowledge and belief. Rothwell’s works feature real-and-imagined characters caught between fiction and non-fiction, the lies in the land and the lie of the land. His narratives create a form of generic disorientation that has a political, social and epistemological purpose. Central to Rothwell’s literary project is the reminder that spatial representations influence spatial practices. The author advocates for a break from the novelistic tradition; the country has seen enough literary and legal fictions that had catastrophic consequences for the native population and the environment.
'I argue that Rothwell’s spatial and literary renegotiations culminate in the formation of a new literary genre, the narrative essay. The author decolonises place, space and literary forms to articulate ethical models of non-belonging. Rothwell offers a transformative sublime aesthetics that I analyse as an expression of Bill Ashcroft’s ‘horizonal sublime’ and Christopher Hitt’s ‘ecological sublime’. I compare Rothwell’s ethics of representation, characterised by a self-reflexive prose, narrative instability and narrative regression, to that of Anglo-German author W.G. Sebald, who uses similar techniques in his evocation of a ruined Europe. Rothwell not only presents man’s propensity for a ‘Natural History of Destruction’, he is also intent on identifying the mechanisms at work in building the future.' (Publication abstract)