Writing Country: Lightning, Agony, and Vertigo

Authors

  • Brian Castro University of Adelaide

Keywords:

Barry Andrews, fiction, late style, multiculturalism, migration, diaspora, Australian literature,

Abstract

This keynote addresses the topic of "style" in Australian letters. It speculates that "Australian style" is very much a product of a melancholic personality, and that being "unhoused" is the modern condition of a writer's formation. The paper also goes on to explore how biography and autobiography are imaginatively interwoven to produce the uncanny in narrative; a puzzlement about the real which makes it difficult to live without writing. Proposing that there are three stages in the composition of a novel: lightning, agony and vertigo, it is suggested that there is an overlay of this pattern upon the trajectory of a writer's career, from early disturbances, through production of work, to late style.

Author Biography

  • Brian Castro, University of Adelaide
    Creative Writing
    Professor & Chair

Downloads

Issue

Section

Barry Andrews Memorial Lecture

How to Cite

Writing Country: Lightning, Agony, and Vertigo. (2014). Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, 14(3). https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/JASAL/article/view/10280