Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

June 2011, no. 332

Free Article: No
Contents Category: Letters
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Stuart Macintyre’s response to my letter (May 2011) acknowledges that in terms of ‘composition, character and loyalty’ – that is, the basic needs of nationalism – Australia defined itself for much of last century in British race terms. But he continues to define John Curtin’s Empire Council proposal as ‘pragmatic’, thus playing down not only Curtin’s patient efforts to win his party and the people over to his ideas, but also the broader point that because Australians defined themselves as British he could expect, through such a Council, that all the British world would unite to protect equally and fully all the British peoples, including Australia’s own distinctive interests, within the postwar Empire.

Display Review Rating: No

 

James Curran replies to Stuart Macintyre

Dear Editor,

Stuart Macintyre’s response to my letter (May 2011) acknowledges that in terms of ‘composition, character and loyalty’ – that is, the basic needs of nationalism – Australia defined itself for much of last century in British race terms. But he continues to define John Curtin’s Empire Council proposal as ‘pragmatic’, thus playing down not only Curtin’s patient efforts to win his party and the people over to his ideas, but also the broader point that because Australians defined themselves as British he could expect, through such a Council, that all the British world would unite to protect equally and fully all the British peoples, including Australia’s own distinctive interests, within the postwar Empire.

It is certainly valid to ask why Australian leaders since Deakin’s time, despite one rebuff after another, kept visiting London trying to achieve the unachievable – an effective seat at the high table of imperial policy-making. It cannot be dismissed as a narrowly self-interested method of obtaining cheap defence. This begs a second, related question: namely, why did Curtin not approach the United States – which had in the Pacific war demonstrated its much superior ability to protect Australia – with a request for joint policy-making? The answer must be that they were not a British people.

Macintyre juxtaposes Curtin’s Britishness with his ‘angry’ cable battles with Churchill. He sees a similar tension between the dumping by the ABC of ‘The British Grenadiers’ in favour of ‘Advance Australia Fair’ in 1942, with Curtin rebuking Calwell in 1943 for wanting to play ‘Advance Australia Fair’ in cinemas. But Curtin had no problem with the latter being played to help ‘build morale’. In any case, ‘Advance Australia Fair’ was a hymn to Australia’s essential Britishness, with references to the country’s ‘British soul’. It would take the Labor government of Bob Hawke, in 1984, to at last remove these offending verses.

James Curran, Sydney, NSW

 

 

Universal White

Dear Editor,

In his retrospective essay on Patrick White (‘Continentally Shelved’, April 2011), Charles Lock was correct to assert that ‘The present neglect of Patrick White around the world is a scandal.’ Accordingly, like me, he might have been astonished that J.G. Farrell’s Troubles was preferred to The Vivisector – a work of vastly wider artistic scope – in last year’s Lost Man Booker Prize. It is also a scandal that so many of White’s novels are not currently in print. Don’t publishers have an enduring obligation to their successful authors?

While many of Professor Lock’s observations are acute and informed, I am less convinced by his diagnosis. The fact that, probably correctly, he believes that too many Australian critics and scholars are patriotically myopic about what White attempted artistically, and the fact that there are wider aesthetic vistas to be explored in his work, do not vitiate the truth that White was an Australian artist. The real point is that he transcended locality to become universal and the real regret, therefore, is that the literary world seems to remain blind to his aspiration: this is hardly the fault of those who study or teach White’s work here.

Consider a few parallel cases in music. Elgar was unquestionably an English composer; Janáèek’s music is steeped in Moravian culture; Messiaen’s oeuvre is, in its approach and its spirit, abundantly French. However, none of them is limited to his cultural roots; all are universal artists.

Indeed, White’s familiarity with literature was international and diverse. This is reflected in his own writing and it could be argued that he repeatedly sought to rewrite huge nineteenth-century novels. In fact, Brian Kiernan argues that The Tree of Man has the subtext of the artist bringing literary culture to the antipodes, and that its first chapter is a version of the Book of Genesis.

It is, in short, possible to be both national and international as an artist, though Professor Lock seems to believe that creative people need to make a choice. That is a false dilemma.

John Carmody, Roseville, NSW

 

Charles Lock replies:

I am uncertain as to the grounds of disagreement that are supposed to exist between me and your correspondent. However, in the last paragraph a belief is ascribed to me, and then pronounced false, so I should respond. Let me say that any choices made by the author, whether topographical, thematic, symbolic, political, polemical, or whatever, will be only the beginning of the process by which, posthumously, her or his works will be received and evaluated; the rest is in the hands of readers and critics and, yes, publishers – though a publisher’s first obligation has always been to the market, and markets are shaped by readers and critics.

Charles Lock, Copenhagen, Denmark

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Features
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Article Title: The paradoxical neglect of Australian art abroad  
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Twenty years ago, when I was at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, I heard of an Arthur Boyd exhibition in SoHo. Recklessly, without seeing the show, I urged my American friends to see one of Australia’s foremost contemporary painters. The gallery, unknown to me, turned out to be small and unimpressive. There were five or six late paintings, including one of those large, multi-figured bathers, with that disconcerting quality of Boyd at the end of his career, both slapdash and commercial at the same moment. ‘So this is what contemporary Australian painting looks like?’ my companion asked ironically, just within the bounds of good manners.

Display Review Rating: No

Twenty years ago, when I was at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, I heard of an Arthur Boyd exhibition in SoHo. Recklessly, without seeing the show, I urged my American friends to see one of Australia’s foremost contemporary painters. The gallery, unknown to me, turned out to be small and unimpressive. There were five or six late paintings, including one of those large, multi-figured bathers, with that disconcerting quality of Boyd at the end of his career, both slapdash and commercial at the same moment. ‘So this is what contemporary Australian painting looks like?’ my companion asked ironically, just within the bounds of good manners.

Read more: 'The paradoxical neglect of Australian art abroad' by Patrick McCaughey

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Features
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Would it be indulgent to invoke Leonard Cohen? It’s just that his song ‘Take This Waltz’, which begins ‘Now in Vienna there are ten pretty women’, brings to mind that city’s fin-de-siècle world. In a liquescent poetic mosaic of shoulders and thighs, lilies, hyacinths, moonshine, and dew, I see the women as if painted by Gustav Klimt – portraitist, libertine – someone who ‘climbs to your picture with a garland of freshly cut tears’. And Cohen’s Kafkaesque ‘lobby with nine hundred windows’ stirs up images of Vienna as a city of windows, of watching and being watched.

Book 1 Title: Good Living Street
Book 1 Subtitle: A Personal History
Book Author: David Walker
Book 1 Biblio: Giramondo, $32.95 pb, 336 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
Display Review Rating: No

Would it be indulgent to invoke Leonard Cohen? It’s just that his song ‘Take This Waltz’, which begins ‘Now in Vienna there are ten pretty women’, brings to mind that city’s fin-de-siècle world. In a liquescent poetic mosaic of shoulders and thighs, lilies, hyacinths, moonshine, and dew, I see the women as if painted by Gustav Klimt – portraitist, libertine – someone who ‘climbs to your picture with a garland of freshly cut tears’. And Cohen’s Kafkaesque ‘lobby with nine hundred windows’ stirs up images of Vienna as a city of windows, of watching and being watched. The song (based on a poem by Garcia Lorca) is desirous, death-defying, incessant, sardonic. Like the narrative of Tim Bonyhady’s book, it blends individual and larger histories. We are reminded of a place and time which, for many, was both gorgeous and abject, narcissistic and melancholy. With one foot in the nineteenth century and the other in the twentieth, it was a city waltzing towards immeasurable tragedy.

Read more: Evelyn Juers reviews 'Good Living Street: The fortunes of my Viennese family' by Tim Bonyhady

Write comment (0 Comments)
Frances Spalding reviews Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper by Alexandra Harris
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Features
Review Article: Yes
Show Author Link: Yes
Online Only: No
Custom Highlight Text:

Romantic Moderns,like this year’s wisteria in England, is catching the attention of many. Both are very English phenomena; and while Oxbridge colleges and London’s residential streets drip purple blossom, this new title has won the Guardian newspaper’s first book award and been shortlisted for two other eminent prizes. Public interest has been further stimulated by word of mouth, while excellent packaging, in terms of product design and well-chosen illustrations, has turned this book into a popular gift. It is also the subject of much debate. Few would deny that by the late 1930s in England a concerted project of national self-discovery was under way. But surely this was a shameful retreat? Didn’t it mean a return to the past, to safe traditions and to a ‘Little England’ mentality, after the wider and more progressive embrace of international modernism? Or is Alexandra Harris right to talk of a modern English renaissance which, as it unfolded fully in the 1940s, proved bold, timely, necessary, and of undeniable cultural significance?

Book 1 Title: Romantic Moderns
Book 1 Subtitle: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper
Book Author: Alexandra Harris
Book 1 Biblio: Thames & Hudson, $49.95 hb, 320 pp
Display Review Rating: No

Romantic Moderns,like this year’s wisteria in England, is catching the attention of many. Both are very English phenomena; and while Oxbridge colleges and London’s residential streets drip purple blossom, this new title has won the Guardian newspaper’s first book award and been shortlisted for two other eminent prizes. Public interest has been further stimulated by word of mouth, while excellent packaging, in terms of product design and well-chosen illustrations, has turned this book into a popular gift. It is also the subject of much debate. Few would deny that by the late 1930s in England a concerted project of national self-discovery was under way. But surely this was a shameful retreat? Didn’t it mean a return to the past, to safe traditions and to a ‘Little England’ mentality, after the wider and more progressive embrace of international modernism? Or is Alexandra Harris right to talk of a modern English renaissance which, as it unfolded fully in the 1940s, proved bold, timely, necessary, and of undeniable cultural significance?

Read more: Frances Spalding reviews 'Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from...

Write comment (0 Comments)
Free Article: No
Contents Category: Features
Custom Article Title: Gideon Haigh reviews 'Sideshow: Dumbing down democracy' by Lindsay Tanner
Custom Highlight Text:

Bill Clinton discouraged politicians from picking fights with people who bought their ink by the barrel. Mindful of that advice, Lindsay Tanner has waited until the end of a career dedicated to the ‘serious craft of politics’ to remonstrate with the fourth estate about its fundamental unseriousness in reporting the democratic process ...

Book 1 Title: Sideshow: Dumbing Down Democracy
Book Author: Lindsay Tanner
Book 1 Biblio: Scribe, $32.95 pb, 240 pp, 9781921844065
Book 1 Author Type: Author

Bill Clinton discouraged politicians from picking fights with people who bought their ink by the barrel. Mindful of that advice, Lindsay Tanner has waited until the end of a career dedicated to the ‘serious craft of politics’ to remonstrate with the fourth estate about its fundamental unseriousness in reporting the democratic process.

Read more: Gideon Haigh reviews 'Sideshow: Dumbing down democracy' by Lindsay Tanner

Write comment (1 Comment)