Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-2l2gl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-02T02:07:32.196Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Love, Lust, Life and Landscape: Writing About Brisbane in the Last Twenty Years

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

Get access

Extract

Brisbane is the kind of city that if it did not exist would have to be invented — and indeed it has by many of its writers. Its history of settlement and its political conservatism of the slash, burn and bulldoze variety has urged writers like Sam Watson in his novel The Kadaitcha Sung to depict it as a place of punishment, violence, racism and red-necked parochialism. The same sense of oppression informs David Malouf's mixed nostalgic references to the city as a place of beauty and boredom, a city you can love and hate in Johnno. In similar vein, Jessica Anderson in Tirra Lirra by the River, Angelika Fremd in The Glass Inferno and Janette Turner Hospital in both short stories and novels, depict Brisbane as a place one needs to leave but also a place where epiphanies are possible, and where the past haunts the present with a ferocious insistence. For novelists Rosie Scott, Janette Turner Hospital and Venero Armanno, Brisbane is simultaneously Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. Many writers depict Brisbane as a great place to grow up in but you wouldn't want to live there — unless you are Hugh Lunn. Brisbane has been, and arguably still is by some writers, seen both favourably and unfavourably as a provincial backwater, unsophisticated and straight — still a frontier town in the popular and literary imagination if not in reality, a place where it is likely that you will know somebody who knows somebody you know. This is pointed out repeatedly by John Birmingham, author of the whimsical He Died With a Felafel in his Hand, by way of a distinguishing feature of flat life in Brisbane in contrast to other (Southern) capitals. In Brisbane, Birmingham writes:

Everyone's stories intersect, crossing over and through each other like sticky strands of destiny and DNA. (Birmingham, 42)

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Works Cited

Anderson, J. 1978, Tirra Lirra by the River, Penguin, Australia.Google Scholar
Armanno, V. 1993, Romeo of the Underworld, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Birmingham, J. 1994, He Died with a Felafel in his Hand, Yellow Press, Darlinghurst, NSW.Google Scholar
Earls, N. 1996, Zig Zag Street, Anchor, Australia.Google Scholar
Fremd, A. 1992, The Glass Inferno, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Gelder, K. & Salzman, P. (eds) 1988, The New Diversity: Australian Fiction, 1970–1988, McPhee Gribble, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Johnson, S. 1987, Messages from Chaos, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Krauth, N. & Sheahan, R. (eds) 1995, Paradise to Paranoia, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Lee, G. 1978, Pieces for a Glass Piano, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Lunn, H. 1989, Over the Top with Jim, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Malouf, D. 1975, Johnno, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
McGahan, A. 1995, 1988, Allen & Unwin, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Savage, G. 1987, The Estuary, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Scott, R. 1993, Lives on Fire, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Shapcott, T. 1975, Shabbytown Calendar, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Turner, Hospital J. 1988, Charades, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Turner, Hospital J. 1992, The Last Magician, UQP, St Lucia.Google Scholar
Watson, Sam 1990, The Kadaitcha Sung, Penguin, Ringwood, Vic. Google Scholar