Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 From Hotbeds of Depravity to Hidden Treasures : The Narrative Evolution of Melbourne’s Laneways
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Places are both sustained and shaped by the stories we tell about them. In turn, stories of place are influenced by cultural, political, and socioeconomic forces. A form of ‘unplanned’ urban architecture, over almost two centuries Melbourne’s inner-city laneways have been inscribed with multiple layers of narrative. This paper tracks the unfolding tensions around these evolving urban spaces, from Melbourne’s founding up until the present day. Drawing upon site visits, theorists of place, narrative and memory, and analysis of select historical and contemporary texts, the articles explores how the uses of Melbourne’s back lanes have changed over time, and how these changes have been both reflected in, and influenced by, narratives of place. From their genesis as makeshift service lanes, to their early reputation as sites of moral disorder; from shanty towns to celebrated tourist destinations; from public health risks to sites of urban renewal and cultural memorialisation – the transformation of these atmospheric passageways illustratesthe fluid and contested nature of place, and its intrinsic yet unstable relationship with narrative. In considering how narrative has been deployed to stake or negate claims to the laneways, the article traces the role and impact of various actors: government, social reformers, slum residents, novelists, journalists and media outlets, business interests, street artists, and people experiencing homelessness. Melbourne’s inner-urban back lanes emerge as liminal sites where questions of spatial exclusion, cultural capital, and belonging are navigated in complex and shifting ways.' 

 (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series Writing | Architecture no. 55 June 2019 17406051 2019 periodical issue 'Mari Lending puts it elegantly: ‘Architecture, space, and place are inexorable foundations in literature: thematically, compositionally, structurally, associatively, and metaphorically’ (95). ‘Inexorable’ is crucial here. Writing has more than a casual or occasional relationship to architecture. Along with its corollaries, space and place, architecture is foundational to literature, including to the composition of literature (the craft and pedagogy of writing). At the same time, by elaborating upon the human experience of inhabitation, literature and writing accentuate the phenomenological dimensions of architecture, space and place. Under the influence of literature and writing, even the least assuming of buildings (of spaces, of places) are imbued with the richness and potential of architectural associations. All the same, there is no architecture, space or place, without stories always already in play. However one thinks about it, the human element is crucial in writing and architecture.' (Eleni Bastéa and Patrick West, Introduction) 2019
Last amended 28 Aug 2024 13:13:49
X