HORÁKOVÁ, Martina. Leah Purcell’s The Drover’s Wife as Alter/Native Canon. In EASA Conference 'Alter/Native Spaces'. 2019.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Leah Purcell’s The Drover’s Wife as Alter/Native Canon
Autoři HORÁKOVÁ, Martina (203 Česká republika, garant, domácí).
Vydání EASA Conference 'Alter/Native Spaces' 2019.
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Prezentace na konferencích
Obor 60206 Specific literatures
Stát vydavatele Česká republika
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Kód RIV RIV/00216224:14210/19:00108300
Organizační jednotka Filozofická fakulta
Klíčová slova anglicky alter/native canon; Australia; Drover's Wife; Leah Purcell
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam
Změnil Změnila: Mgr. Martina Horáková, Ph.D., učo 19091. Změněno: 28. 4. 2020 21:18.
Anotace
There is probably not much left to be said about Henry Lawson’s iconic short story “The Drover’s Wife” (1892), though the Lawson scholarship continues to be interested in the rather ingenious process of mythologizing both the man and his work. Equally notorious are the many playful rewritings, which have in one way or another voiced something particular about the time they were written in—from Murray Bail, Frank Moorhouse, Barbara Jefferis, Anne Gambling, Mandy Sayer, up to the recent edition of all versions by Frank Moorhouse (2017) and Ryan O’Neill’s latest, though certainly not last, collection of 99 reinterpretations of the story in his The Drover’s Wives (2018). My presentation focuses on the theatrical spin written by actor, writer and director Leah Purcell. The play The Drover’s Wife in which Purcell played the lead, premiered in Sydney’s Belvoir Theater in September 2016, attracting enough commercial attention for Purcell and her troupe to start developing the play into a TV miniseries and possibly a feature film produced by one of the Hollywood studios. The main source for this rewriting the story is, expectedly, a much larger and significant presence of Indigeneity. What in Lawson’s canonical text remains elusive and ultimately ambivalent (a treacherous Black who builds a hollow woodpile and the midwife Black Mary who helps the wife deliver her baby), is brought in Purcell’s writing to the spotlight. Not only does the play introduce the character of Yadaka, Aboriginal fugitive accused of white woman’s murder, but eventually the drover’s wife herself is revealed to have Indigenous origin, being Black Mary’s daughter. This powerful twist implicates several things: a tour de force of frontier violence with disturbing and haunting images of racism, rape, lynching, and murder, the play unflinchingly confronts the very foundations of established literary canon as well as national history, providing an alter/native to both.
Návaznosti
GA19-11234S, projekt VaVNázev: Topos sounáležitosti s místem v memoárech australských osadníků
Investor: Grantová agentura ČR, Topos sounáležitosti s místem v memoárech australských osadníků
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 19. 9. 2024 03:24