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y separately published work icon Australia single work   novel  
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... 2016 Australia
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'La Rosa’s story about a young Argentine couple who migrate to Sydney after the 2001 crash is, on one level, an extended riff on the idea of Australia as the country Argentina could have been. ' (Source : Halford, James 'Southern Conversations : J.M Coetzee in Buenos Aires' in Sydney Review of Books website)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Metalúcida , 2016 .
      image of person or book cover 706727499421150450.jpg
      This image has been sourced from online.
      Extent: 125p.
      Note/s:
      • Published April 5th 2016
      ISBN: 9789874543769

Works about this Work

Southern Conversations : J.M Coetzee in Buenos Aires James Halford , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , February 2017;
'Late on a Monday afternoon in April, I cross Buenos Aires to hear J.M Coetzee give a speech. The journey takes two and a half hours. I leave the cobbled streets, antique stores, and tourist crowds of colonial San Telmo, ride the subway to Retiro Station, and catch a commuter train on the Mitre Line that takes me about 25 kilometres north-west of the centre. As we leave the downtown area, broad boulevards and grand public buildings make way for factories, freeways, and drab apartment blocks. I disembark at Miguelete, the second last station, outside the city limits on the edge of the conurbano, the ring of industrial and working-class neighbourhoods surrounding the federal capital. Imagine a version of Western Sydney with upward of ten million residents. Densely populated, growing fast, and vital to winning government nationally, Greater Buenos Aires is hugely important to the country economically and culturally. But because nearly 40 per cent of the population lives in poverty (on the latest figures from the national statistics institute), and because it has been the heartland of Peronism, the populist workers’ movement that has dominated Argentine politics since the 1940s, the conurbano is often represented as a menace in the mainstream Argentine media. When I ask a group of students for directions to the university campus, they lead me through a suburb of low-set cement buildings, pot-holed streets, and rubble. We cut through an old railway yard where carriages lie rusting in long grass, and squeeze through a gap in the chain-link fence.' (Introduction)
Southern Conversations : J.M Coetzee in Buenos Aires James Halford , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , February 2017;
'Late on a Monday afternoon in April, I cross Buenos Aires to hear J.M Coetzee give a speech. The journey takes two and a half hours. I leave the cobbled streets, antique stores, and tourist crowds of colonial San Telmo, ride the subway to Retiro Station, and catch a commuter train on the Mitre Line that takes me about 25 kilometres north-west of the centre. As we leave the downtown area, broad boulevards and grand public buildings make way for factories, freeways, and drab apartment blocks. I disembark at Miguelete, the second last station, outside the city limits on the edge of the conurbano, the ring of industrial and working-class neighbourhoods surrounding the federal capital. Imagine a version of Western Sydney with upward of ten million residents. Densely populated, growing fast, and vital to winning government nationally, Greater Buenos Aires is hugely important to the country economically and culturally. But because nearly 40 per cent of the population lives in poverty (on the latest figures from the national statistics institute), and because it has been the heartland of Peronism, the populist workers’ movement that has dominated Argentine politics since the 1940s, the conurbano is often represented as a menace in the mainstream Argentine media. When I ask a group of students for directions to the university campus, they lead me through a suburb of low-set cement buildings, pot-holed streets, and rubble. We cut through an old railway yard where carriages lie rusting in long grass, and squeeze through a gap in the chain-link fence.' (Introduction)
Last amended 6 Mar 2017 10:22:47
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