Artigo Revisado por pares

Cultural Memory in Postcolonial Fiction: The Uses and Abuses of Ned Kelly

2002; University of Queensland Press; Linguagem: Inglês

10.20314/als.0cf1504a84

ISSN

1837-6479

Autores

Graham Huggan,

Tópico(s)

Irish and British Studies

Resumo

Focusing on Carey’s and Drewe’s representations of the Ned Kelly legend, the article explores the issues of memory, cultural myths and postcolonial fiction. Huggan argues that the two novels ‘illustrate the importance of the literary text in structuring the individual/collective memory process’, drawing attention to the ways in which memory is dependent on metaphor, particularly metaphors of the body, to actualise remembered experience. Both works ‘are postcolonial renderings, not just of one of Australia’s most powerful national narratives, but also one of its most enduring and yet paradoxically amnesiac cultural myths. In remembering Ned Kelly, both writers draw attention to alternative histories inscribed upon the wild colonial body, through which that nation’s chequered past can be creatively transformed and its present critically reassessed.’ The article concludes with reflections on the malleability and current fashionability of the Kelly legend, assessing its implications for ‘a Wester ex-settler society whose own thriving memory industry bears so many of the contradictory signs of the nation’s colonial past’.

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