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Julia Gillard PM Posted by Susan_Hawthorne on 23 Jun 2010

So Julia Gillard is Australia’s first woman to be PM. I hope she receives better treatment in that position than some of the other women who in the past have been sent in to clean up the mess!

I hope she is treated with the respect she is due. Over the last three years Julia Gillard has shown her toughness and her ability to deal with the rough and tumble of Australian politics. In fact, she has really shone through.

When she first became Deputy Leader of the Labor Party, I was dubious. Although pleased to see her in the position, I was not sure that she would be more than a sop to voters who thought there should be a little more equity in politics. But she has proven me wrong. That’s not to say that she is perfect, but until women are also permitted flaws in public life, we have come nowhere.

I hope she can be a good leader; the kind of leader Australia needs; someone thoughtful and frank; someone who listens. I hope that she is not saddled with too many expectations, because one person, one woman cannot fix all of society’s ills. I hope she can be a real person in a difficult job.


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μεταdata Posted by Susan_Hawthorne on 20 May 2010

you can tell we no longer
know our classics
a postmodern breakfast
of
Greek and Latin
μετα− meta-: Greek preposition meaning
with or after
data: plural of datum
(past participle of the verb dare to give)
Latin for a thing given or granted,
something known or assumed as fact,
and made the basis of reasoning or calculation

μεταdata is definitely after: after the date
of my dictionary, printed in 1977
metadata is the data that comes with or after the book

a whole world of information and facts
attached to an eBook with ones and zeros

a spreadsheet of working days
column after column after column after column after

six columns of ISBNs
two ways of listing the title
long blurbs and short
subject matter and keywords
prices in different currencies
dimensions in metric and imperial
an excerpt and its source
a review and its source
and more …

and everyone wants something different
I’m after
and after
I’m over it


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Why men don’t read books by women Posted by Susan_Hawthorne on 22 Apr 2010

you can tell we no longer
know our classics
a postmodern breakfast
of
Greek and Latin
μετα− meta-: Greek preposition meaning
with or after
data: plural of datum
(past participle of the verb dare to give)
Latin for a thing given or granted,
something known or assumed as fact,
and made the basis of reasoning or calculation

μεταdata is definitely after: after the date
of my dictionary, printed in 1977
metadata is the data that comes with or after the book

a whole world of information and facts
attached to an eBook with ones and zeros

a spreadsheet of working days
column after column after column after column after

six columns of ISBNs
two ways of listing the title
long blurbs and short
subject matter and keywords
prices in different currencies
dimensions in metric and imperial
an excerpt and its source
a review and its source
and more …

and everyone wants something different
I’m after
and after
I’m over it


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On women’s writing 2: Miles Franklin, Orange, sausage fests and ‘grimness’ Posted by Susan_Hawthorne on 31 Mar 2010

A guest post by Kill Your Darlings associate editor and Spinifex friend, Jo Case


The Miles Franklin longlist for 2010 has been announced – and with only three of the 12 writers women, the signs are ominous that there may be another sausage fest writes Jo Case in her Kill Your Darlings blog (aka all-male shortlist) this year.

In strictly objective alphabetical order, the longlist is:

Patrick Allington, Figurehead
Peter Carey, Parrot and Olivier in America
Brian Castro, The Bath Fugues
Jon Doust, Boy on a Wire
Deborah Forster, The Book of Emmett
David Foster, Sons of the Rumour
Glenda Guest, Siddon Rock
Sonya Hartnett, Butterfly
Thomas Keneally, The People’s Train
Alex Miller, Lovesong
Craig Silvey, Jasper Jones
Peter Temple, Truth

While there’s not the very obvious omission of female literary heavyweights that there was last year (when Kate Grenville, Helen Garner, Amanda Lohrey and Joan London all missed out), the gender imbalance is still curious, to say the least.

It didn’t take long for Kalinda Ashton’s The Danger Game and Cate Kennedy’s The World Beneath to spring to mind as surprising books to be left off the longlist. And what about Andrea Goldsmith’s Reunion? (‘It’s a mystery why Andrea Goldsmith is not a household name,’ wrote Jennifer Levasseur, reviewing the book in The Australian. ‘Her latest offering should be welcomed with the excitement that greets the best Australian novelists working today.’)

There’s a robust conversation about this online already (along with debates about the interpretation of ‘Australian life in any of its phases’), with some of the best discussions happening in the comments sections of James Bradley’s blog and the blog of Stephen Romei, editor of ALR.

On the latter, former Miles Franklin judge Kerryn Goldsworthy was invited to comment on the gender issue. While she wasn’t particularly concerned about the make-up of this year’s longlist, apart from the omission of Cate Kennedy, she had been among those concerned about last year’s shortlist. She wrote:

The question of who’s writing ‘better books’ always comes down to the criteria that are applied in judging them, and I do think that a lot of the more traditional literary values are still skewed or coded ‘masculine’. Anyone writing a novel about private life, domestic life, family life or emotional life, anyone writing a short novel or a ‘small-canvas’ novel and anyone writing a novel whose main character is a woman (and I don’t mean some male fantasy figure like Lara … erm … Croft, I mean an actual warts-and-all woman) is often automatically, unconsciously disadvantaged in competitions like this, regardless of the quality of the writing. And not necessarily only by male judges, but by anyone who’s been taught to value ‘big’ books about ‘important’ subjects.

The conversation about gender and literary prizes is aflame overseas at the moment, too. Back in November last year, author, critic, editor and prize judge Lizzie Sturnick wrote a frustrated article in response to Publisher’s Weekly’s all-male Top 10 Books of 2009. The Publisher’s Weekly editors had explained the outcome thus: ‘We wanted the list to reflect what we thought were the top 10 books of the year with no other consideration. We ignored gender and genre and who had the buzz … It disturbed us when we were done that our list was all male.’

‘The publishing industry is no better at ignoring gender than your average obstetrician,’ Sturnick acidly responded. Giving an insider’s view from one judging panel she’d been a member of, she said she’d watched as books by men were labelled ‘ambitious’ (which she interpreted as: ‘had shot high and fallen short’), while books by women had been called ‘small’, ‘domestic’ and ‘unambitious’. In a line that has since echoed around cyberspace, she wrote:

‘I just want to say,’ I said as the meeting closed, ‘that we have sat here and consistently called books by women small and books by men large, by no quantifiable metric.’

Interestingly, while Sturnick reported her experience of women’s fiction being judged as ‘small’ and ‘domestic’, a judge of another literary prize has come under fire for complaining of women’s fiction as ‘grim’. Daisy Goodwin, chair of the judges for this year’s round of the all-women Orange Prize said:

‘There’s not been much wit and not much joy, there’s a lot of grimness out there … Pleasure seems to have become a rather neglected element in publishing.’

She blamed publishers for ‘lagging behind what the public want’. It’s interesting, I think, that she’s based her analysis on reading the books entered to a major literary prize. It seems likely to me that publishers are basing their choices on what they think literary award judges (like herself) want. Sending in their more ‘ambitious’ books, perhaps?

‘If the books that are entered have been remarkably downbeat this year, it’s perhaps because editors of lighter books by women aren’t confident that they command the same respect as grim ones,’ retorted Jean Hannah Edelstein in The Guardian, remarking that witty, ‘pleasurable’ books by women are often marketed as specifically ‘women’s’ reading, decorated with pink covers and the like.

She went on to say that it was hard to imagine ‘our most beloved, funny female writers of the past’ (like Nancy Mitford) being in contention for The Orange Prize. Goodwin’s admonition for female writers to ‘cheer up, love’, she said, would be unlikely to be directed at a male writer: ‘Debates about who’s going to be the next Philip Roth are not coloured by criticisms of brilliant young male authors for not being cheery enough – I’ve not read any criticism that Legend of a Suicide, for example, lacks joy.’

Another writer, William Skidelsky, agreed with Edelstein, but put another twist on Goodwin’s remarks: she was only speaking the truth, he said. He reported ‘a growing feeling that, in order to be “serious”, novels have to be dark in tone … arguably, women have been affected by this much more than men, because of the pronounced divide in women’s fiction between frothy, commercial “chicklit” and more serious, “literary” work.’ This perception needs to be talked about, he said, as it’s affecting the kinds of books that are written and published.

Amanda Craig, one of the longlisted novelists, told Skidelsy: ‘There really is a sense that women writers have two paths – on the one hand, towards chicklit; on the other, the serious route. And if they take the latter, there’s a feeling that they have to be extra serious in order to be treated with respect.’

It’s an interesting debate. The Orange longlist, in full, is:

Rosie Alison, The Very Thought of You
Eleanor Catton, The Rehearsal
Clare Clark, Savage Lands
Amanda Craig, Hearts and Minds
Roopa Farooki, The Way Things Look to Me
Rebecca Gowers, The Twisted Heart
MJ Hyland, This is How
Sadie Jones, Small Wars
Barbara Kingsolver, The Lacuna
Laila Lalami, Secret Son
Andrea Levy, The Long Song
Attica Locke, Black Water Rising
Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall
Maria McCann, The Wilding
Nadifa Mohamed, Black Mamba Boy
Lorrie Moore, A Gate at the Stairs
Monique Roffey, The White Woman on the Green Bicycle
Amy Sackville, The Still Point
Kathryn Stockett, The Help
Sarah Waters, The Little Stranger


Originally posted 24 March 2010 on Killings, the Kill Your Darlings blog


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Cyclone Larry and climate change Posted by Susan_Hawthorne on 17 Mar 2010

There’s a Category-4 cyclone approaching the Queensland coast, Cyclone Ului. It is currently on track to hit the coast on 20 March. If it does, it will be four years to the day since Category-5 Cyclone Larry hit the Queensland coast at Innisfail.

And in the last few days, Fiji has been so devastated by Cyclone Tomas that the country has been declared to be in a state of catastrophe.

I was there for Cyclone Larry and it was no easy experience. The winds began to blow late at night and only three hours later it was strong enough for all the electricity to go out. It was the last of the electricity for a whole month.

It’s the aftermath of a cyclone that hits hardest, because although the cyclone itself is scary, the drudgery of the cleanup, the day-after-day of mess, the skeleton trees, the garden plants uprooted, the leaf matter pasted on every surface, the roofing and guttering strewn hundreds of metres from where it should be – these are the things that wear you down during the day. And at night, in come the nightmares. You wake already exhausted from battling your own demons and the demons of trauma.

I didn’t think that I was in any way traumatised by the experience until I started to document it. Months afterwards I was still responding to TV reports of cyclones in far flung places and though the level of emotional noise has reduced, I’m far more hypersensitive to these things now than I was before Larry.

So when I hear that Tomas has left behind catastrophe in Fiji, and that Ului is waiting to pounce on Queensland, I too am getting ready to respond.

With climate change, such events will increase in frequency and in intensity. One of my readers, Jordie Albiston, said that the book of poems that arose from my experience of Cyclone Larry, Earth’s Breath, reminded her in its intensity of the Victorian bushfires. Climate change will bring more bushfires as well.

What will we do, when it’s too late to argue about whether climate change is on its way, and we are all half traumatised by our latest experience of severe weather events – whether it be cyclones, bushfires, flooding, tidal surges or blizzards? It isn’t just the science we need to investigate, it’s the human response. Will it make us more in tune with nature? I think that’s unlikely. Will it raise the pitch of emotional wobbliness? Probably. Will it increase levels of crime, disorientation, dispossession, homelessness? This sounds extreme even to me. But if I were to multiply my experience and be subjected to events such as these more often, I can see what might happen.

This weekend on ABC’s Radio National you can hear the sounds of the cyclone I recorded, hear me read from Earth’s Breath. It’s on Poetica, 3 pm, 20 March, four years to the day after Cyclone Larry.

To listen to the podcast go to Poetica.

For more information on the book go to the Spinifex site.


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