While The Voice of Silence established that historical fiction can meaningfully humanise the emotional dimensions of colonisation, white-written narratives such as Eleanor Dark’s The Timeless Land (1941) and Kate Grenville’s The Secret River (2005) remain epistemologically constrained by the very Western frameworks they seek to critique. To merely include Aboriginal perspectives within those inherited structures…
But wounds will wince, especially in the salt air… Patrick White, Voss
The deep Australianism and general can-do attitude of the surf community have often suppressed its sense of danger. Drowning, ailments and collisions are worries that were long-swallowed as ‘parts of the sport’, and risks one assumes when they partake in it. Braving a Sunday…