Issue Details: First known date: 2018... 2018 How to Drown a Husband: Five Bells, Four Chambers, and Saturday Nights at Sea
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'An autoethnography of a marriage and its demise, this work relies on the reflective modality of the lyric essay to consider the role of memory in love, heartbreak, and reconciliation. Examining two characters from different cultures whose ancestors fought for opposing sides during World War II, this story wonders if their marriage was doomed by history and the silences of intergenerational shame that emerged in Germany particularly during the post-war occupation period. Using the methodology of the witnessing imagination this essay also argues that creative writing gives shape to traumatic historical events and allows remarkable access to complex processes of recovery. Two poets—Kenneth Slessor and Joseph Brodsky—are employed as metaphoric soldiers fighting over the terrain of memory alongside the ‘witness’ author, interrogating personal issues about the on-going heartbreak of a failed marriage which come to symbolise larger concerns of social and political reconciliation. The notion of memory’s integrity to acts of reconciliation is explored through storytelling which relies on the ethical foundations of bibliotherapy as a creative practice devoted to healing trauma. This account of love and its subsequent heartbreak in a post-traumatic, ‘occupied space’ suggests that lyrical interventions afford distinctive opportunities for enhanced understandings to emerge.' (Abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Life Writing vol. 15 no. 1 2018 12336598 2018 periodical issue

    'Life Writing would like to record our appreciation and thanks for the work of Dr Rachel Robertson, who is stepping down from her editorial role. Rachel was Associate Editor from 2013 to 2015 and Reflections Editor from 2015 to the present. We have benefitted hugely from her expertise and judgement in the field of reflective memoir. Her own memoir, Reaching One Thousand (‘a deeply enriching book’ - The Age), was shortlisted for the 2013 National Biography Award. We hope Rachel will go on keeping a friendly eye on the journal's work as she takes up a position on the editorial board.

    'At the same time we welcome Dr Kylie Cardell as Life Writing's new Reflections Editor. Kylie was recently a guest editor (together with Professor Kate Douglas) of the journal's December 2017 issue. That edition (‘Locating Lives’) resulted from the important inaugural Regional IABA Conference, which launched the International Auto/Biography Association's Asia-Pacific chapter. We look forward to Kylie's influence on the journal's future development.'

    (Editorial)

    2018
    pg. 121-134
Last amended 11 Dec 2017 15:35:47
121-134 How to Drown a Husband: Five Bells, Four Chambers, and Saturday Nights at Seasmall AustLit logo Life Writing
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