Reading Australia Essay: "Romulus, My Father" by Raimond Gaita


Autoria(s): Gislason, Kari
Data(s)

31/03/2015

Resumo

This is an introductory essay about the memoir "Romulus, My Father" by Raimond Gaita. The essay was published as part of the Copyright Agency's "Reading Australia" initiative. "In a critical moment of reflection and pause, Romulus, My Father offers the reader a key to its interpretation. The author – philosopher Raimond Gaita – tells us that ‘Plato said that those who love and seek wisdom are clinging in recollection to things they once saw’. This reference to the Greek philosopher’s work Phaedrus occurs when the boy Raimond is about eight years old. He seems already to understand much about his father, in particular his father’s goodness, which he finds expressed in his workmanship, his honesty, and his commitment to friends. And yet, as Plato forewarns us, a search for the ultimate wisdom of such things must come later – several decades on, when Gaita is faced with the task of writing his father’s eulogy. It is then that a sense of his father’s character is joined to his own search for wisdom, a combination of biography and reflection that marks the memoir form at its best, and shapes the ultimate impact of Romulus, My Father...."--publisher website

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/83193/

Publicador

Australian Book Review, Inc

Relação

https://www.australianbookreview.com.au/component/k2/150-reading-australia/2492-reading-australia-romulus-my-father-by-raimond-gaita

Gislason, Kari (2015) Reading Australia Essay: "Romulus, My Father" by Raimond Gaita. Australian Book Review, March(31).

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; School of Media, Entertainment & Creative Arts

Palavras-Chave #190400 PERFORMING ARTS AND CREATIVE WRITING #200500 LITERARY STUDIES #200502 Australian Literature (excl. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Literature) #Romulus, My Father #Memoir #Raimond Gaita #Literary Structure #Australian Literature
Tipo

Journal Article