'Families can detonate. Some families are torn apart forever by one small act, one solitary mistake. In my family it was a series of small explosions; consistent, passionate, pathetic. Cruel words, crude threats... We spurred each other on till we reached a crescendo of pain and we retired exhausted to our rooms, in tears or in fury.
'Ari is nineteen, unemployed and a poofter who doesn't want to be gay. He is looking for something - anything - to take him away from his aimless existence in suburban Melbourne. He doesn't believe in anyone or anything, except the power of music. All he wants to do is dance, take drugs, have sex and change the world.
'For Ari, all the orthodoxies of family, sex, politics and work have collapsed. Caught between the traditional Greek world of his parents and friends and the alluring, destructive world of clubs, chemicals and anonymous sex, all Ari can do is ease his pain in the only ways he knows how.
'Written in stark, uncompromising prose, Loaded is a first novel of great passion and power.' (From the publisher's website.)
“Introduction to Australian Literature” (ENGL1100) provides a general introduction to the study of Australian literature. In reading texts from a range of genres and periods, students will be introduced to critical reading skills, and to significant themes in Australian writing.
The course comprises three sections:
1. Study of two novels which consider the relationship between story-telling, history and fiction: Robert Drewe's Our Sunshine, about Ned Kelly, and Janet Kelly's The Colour of Walls.
2. A study of short stories from the late nineteenth and the twentieth centuries. This section of the course looks in detail at literary form and stylistic innovation.
3. Discussion of two short novels which consider key themes in Australian culture: war and masculity (in David Malouf's Fly away Peter) and sexuality and cultural identity (in Christos Tsiolkas' Loaded).
The course will also introduce you to research resources in the field of Australian literature, among which the most helpful is the Austlit database (at http://www.austlit.edu.au/). You are encouraged to browse in Austlit to get a sense of the range of contemporary and historical writing, and criticism.
40%
Tutorial Participation
5%
Short-answer questions - Analyzing Literature
20%
Essay - Reading Short Stories
35%
AustLit: Online Database for Australian Literature
Baldick, Chris. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Second edition. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001.
Wilde, William, Joy Hooton and Barry Andrews. The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature. 2nd ed. Oxford: London, 1994.