Introduction: The work of Thea Astley

IF 0.7 Q2 AREA STUDIES Queensland Review Pub Date : 2019-12-01 DOI:10.1017/qre.2019.25
S. Sheridan
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Abstract

I am honoured and delighted to have been invited, along with Associate Professor Jessica Gildersleeve, to edit this special issue of Queensland Review on the work of Thea Astley. I owe Jessica heartfelt thanks for her hard work and easy collegiality. Fifteen years since Astley’s death, the appearance of this collection of essays marks the development of a growing body of biographical and critical studies of her work. The essays complement Karen Lamb’s 2015 biography, Inventing Her Own Weather, and my critical monograph, The Fiction of Thea Astley (2016), as well as the collection of essays edited by myself and Paul Genoni, Thea Astley’s Fictional Worlds (2006). Most recently, Thea Astley: Selected Poems appeared in 2017, edited by Cheryl Taylor (who has an essay in this issue) and published by the University of Queensland Press (Astley’s publisher for many years). Most of Astley’s novels and story collections are in print, and they are being read in new ways, with new eyes and in new contexts. Text Publishing has brought out reprints of four of the novels in its Classics series, with introductions by novelists of today. Kate Grenville on A Kindness Cup (1974) emphasises Astley’s pioneering role as a historical novelist, particularly her capacity for ‘saying the unsayable’ about the violence of colonialism. Chloe Hooper, introducing The Multiple Effects of Rainshadow (1996), draws attention to the parallels between the account of the death of Cameron Doomadgee on Palm Island in 2005, which she covered in her book The Tall Man (2008), and Astley’s novel based on a massacre on the island in 1930 and its long-term after-effects. Emily Maguire writes of Astley’s last novel, Drylands (1999), that we are now living in the ‘bleak’ future world that it envisaged, where ‘so little that is punishable in any ethical society is punished in this one’ – but that Astley writes with ‘the skill of a novelist with both immense compassion and knife-thrower levels of nerve’. Emerging novelist Jennifer Down had not previously read Reaching Tin River (1990), and her introduction to the novel conveys her surprised pleasure at the economy of the writing and its qualities: ‘acerbic but never cynical, tender but never sentimental, ironic but never cruel’. Other recent readers, who offer comments on It’s Raining in Mango (1987) on the Goodreads website (where all Astley’s novels are listed), express surprise that an Australian novelist in the 1980s should have taken such a powerfully critical stance on racist and sexist violence, or presented a gay man as a major character. In an age
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简介:Thea Astley的作品
我很荣幸也很高兴被邀请与杰西卡·吉尔德塞夫副教授一起编辑这一期《昆士兰评论》关于西娅·阿斯特利作品的特刊。我衷心感谢杰西卡的辛勤工作和轻松合作。阿斯特利去世15年后,这本散文集的出现标志着对她的作品进行传记和批判性研究的发展。这些文章补充了凯伦·兰姆2015年的传记《创造她自己的天气》,我的评论专著《西娅·阿斯特利的小说》(2016),以及我和保罗·吉尼奥尼编辑的散文集《西娅·阿斯特利的虚构世界》(2006)。最近,《西娅·阿斯特利:诗选》于2017年出版,由谢丽尔·泰勒(Cheryl Taylor)编辑(她在本刊上发表了一篇文章),由昆士兰大学出版社(阿斯特利多年的出版商)出版。阿斯特利的大部分小说和故事集都已出版,人们正以新的方式、新的眼光和新的背景来阅读它们。文本出版公司重印了经典系列中的四本小说,并由当代小说家作了介绍。凯特·格伦维尔在《善意杯》(1974)中强调了阿斯特利作为历史小说家的先锋角色,尤其是她对殖民主义暴力“说出不可言说”的能力。克洛伊·胡珀在介绍《雨影的多重影响》(1996)时,将人们的注意力吸引到2005年卡梅伦·末日吉在棕榈岛上死亡的叙述与阿斯特利的小说之间的相似之处,后者在她的书《高个子男人》(2008)中有所描述,而阿斯特利的小说则基于1930年岛上的大屠杀及其长期后果。艾米丽·马奎尔在谈到阿斯特利的最后一部小说《旱地》(1999)时写道,我们现在生活在小说所设想的“凄凉”的未来世界里,“在任何一个道德社会中,受到惩罚的东西在这个社会中都很少受到惩罚”——但阿斯特利的写作技巧“既具有巨大的同情心,又具有掷刀者的勇气”。新兴小说家詹妮弗·唐恩之前没有读过《到达锡河》(1990),她对小说的介绍表达了她对写作的简洁及其品质的惊喜:“尖刻但从不愤世嫉俗,温柔但从不多愁善感,讽刺但从不残酷”。其他最近的读者在Goodreads网站(阿斯特利的所有小说都列在这个网站上)上对《芒果下着雨》(1987)发表评论,他们对一个20世纪80年代的澳大利亚小说家对种族主义和性别歧视暴力采取如此有力的批评立场,或者把一个同性恋男人作为主要角色表示惊讶。在一个时代
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来源期刊
Queensland Review
Queensland Review AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
66.70%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Published in association with Griffith University Queensland Review is a multi-disciplinary journal of Australian Studies which focuses on the history, literature, culture, society, politics and environment of the state of Queensland. Queensland’s relations with Asia, the Pacific islands and Papua New Guinea are a particular focus of the journal, as are comparative studies with other regions. In addition to scholarly articles, Queensland Review publishes commentaries, interviews, and book reviews.
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