From Jindabyne to 'Jindabyne' : immigrant and indigenous specters


Autoria(s): Hateley, Erica
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

This paper reads Ray Lawrence's film Jindabyne (2006) in order to consider how "Australian" connotes as "immigrant" or "Indigenous" in contemporary Australia. Although the film is an adaptation of an American short story, it exploits an existing grammar of place in Australian cultural production in order to interrogate this very culture. If questions of race, gender, and class have haunted post-settlement Australia, Lawrence's film simultaneously stages these spectres and gestures towards the necessary failure of any attempt to exorcise them in a place where indigeneity is invisible. Thus, the location of Jindabyne, the town drowned in the name of progress, offers an exemplary visual metaphor for the failed project of identity formation in a place where forgetting is a survival tool.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39104/

Relação

http://www.mla.org/convention

Hateley, Erica (2007) From Jindabyne to 'Jindabyne' : immigrant and indigenous specters. In 2007 Annual Modern Language Association Convention (MLA2007), 27-30 December 2007, Hyatt Regency, Chicago. (Unpublished)

Fonte

Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #190204 Film and Television
Tipo

Conference Paper