Kate Hall Kate Hall i(A83942 works by) (a.k.a. Kate Hazel Hall)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 [Review] Colouring the Rainbow: Blak, Queer and Trans Perspectives Kate Hall , 2022 review
— Appears in: Kalliope X , Spring no. 3 2022;

— Review of Colouring the Rainbow : Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives : Life Stories and Essays by First Nations People of Australia 2015 anthology life story essay
'The life stories and essays in this anthology are bound together in several ways, for instance in their unflinching sharing of trauma and their many demonstrations of the courage required to overcome the effects of trauma. Authors describe their experiences of violence, often of an extreme nature. Some write about losing loved ones to the consequences of homophobia or transphobia. But trauma is not the defining feature of this collection. There is commonality also in the generosity of spirit which flows from the first story, by Tiwi Elder and sistergirl Crystal Johnson. In ‘Napanangka: The True Power of Being Proud’, there is unthinkable violence, but there is also joy, forgiveness and pride. ‘I say to people: “Yes, I am a sistergirl. Yes, I am an Elder. I earned that respect. I earned that title. I got that respect.”’' (Introduction)
1 y separately published work icon From Darkness Kate Hall , United States of America (USA) : Duet Books , 2021 21191306 2021 single work novel romance fantasy young adult

'Sixteen-year-old Ari Wyndham lost her best friend in the sea. Everybody told her it was an accident, but Ari can't forgive herself. Her own life is cut short when a tiger-snake delivers a deathly bite, and a beautiful, ghostly and strangely familiar young woman appears, summoning Ari's soul to the underworld. Ari, however, refuses to go. Though she knows there will be a terrible price to pay for her transgression, the mysterious guide chooses to save Ari. Their rebellion upsets the balance of life and death in Ari's remote coastal village.

'A rift opens from the underworld, unleashing dark magic: savage dog packs emerge at night, fishermen catch ghostly bodies in their nets, and children go missing. Together, Ari and her guide battle the dark powers of the underworld and heal the rift. Though their bond seems unbreakable, it may not be enough. It is up to Ari to find the courage to do the one thing that will save the world from darkness.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 Kate Hall Reviews The Intervention : An Anthology Edited by Rosie Scott and Anita Heiss Kate Hall , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , September no. 19 2016;

— Review of The Intervention : An Anthology 2015 anthology poetry essay prose
1 Event, Tour, Shutter Kate Hall , 2014 single work short story
— Appears in: The Grapple Annual No. 1 2014;
1 Little Quiet One Kate Hall , 2014 single work short story
— Appears in: Overland , Autumn no. 214 2014; (p. 50-55)
1 Horseflesh Kate Hall , 2011 single work short story
— Appears in: Hecate , vol. 37 no. 1 2011; (p. 93-98)
1 'All Are Implicated' : Violence and Accountability in Sam Watson's The Kadaitcha Sung and Alexis Wright's Plains of Promise Kate Hall , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Frontier Skirmishes : Literary and Cultural Debates in Australia after 1992 2010; (p. 199-216)

'Just like historians, writers of fiction have evinced an enduring fascination with the Australian frontier. In and around the decade of the 1990s, writers seemed particularly interested in Tasmania as a place distinguished by its antipodean isolation, and by the bloody violence of its colonial history (see Mudrooroo 1991; Castro 1994; Flanagan 200 l ). Equally violent, though less geographically remote, the Queensland frontier is vividly evoked in two novels from the 1990s: Sam Watson's The Kadaitcha Sung (1990) and Alexis Wright's Plains of Promise (1997). Both novels are by Aboriginal writers, and they both represent, in different ways, the uneasy, ambivalent and often violent connections between their Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal characters. Watson's novel assaults the reader with visceral descriptions of murder, rape, and other forms of violence, between and amongst white and black individuals and communities, in late twentieth-century Brisbane. At the same time, the text details the massacres of Indigenous populations in colonial Queensland (and other states) with a lack of restraint that recalls U.S. writer Cormac McCarthy's depiction of frontier violence in Blood Meridian (1985). Plains of Promise foregrounds the horror of stolen children and the myriad forms of violence and abuse against women (by white and black men) that occurred in missions and institutions from the mid nineteenth century up until at least the 1970s in Australia. The Aboriginal mission is a significant 'frontier' place in the Australian psyche, in part, perhaps, because of its remote or 'outback' setting, but also because it represents a place where a clear boundary exists to demarcate Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultural groups. In examining evocations of the frontier in Australian fiction it is helpful to remember that the frontier is, among other things: a literal (historical) space describing a specific geographical region, an actual or imagined boundary line, a discursive concept and a metaphor. In whatever context it is used the frontier inscribes a boundary between a number of familiar Manichean oppositions: savagery/civilisation, black/white, wild/tamed, us/them, and so on. And, just as the historical and geographical frontier shifts with the creep of colonial expansion, so the figurative frontier of Australian history is an unstable and shifting construct. Australian historiography has, of course been renegotiating this frontier for some time, and it is useful to recall that the recent history wars "were preceded by a long, complicated and strongly contested process of historiographical transition" (Veracini 439). It is an encouraging mark of progress that, during the history wars of the 1990s, right-wing combatants such as historian Keith Windschuttle and former Prime Minister John Howard found themselves in the minority, railing against what they saw as "poses of political correctness" (Howard 23) as the frontier they knew was radically redefined by historians intent on providing "counter-narratives of the nation". I've used Homi Bhabha's much borrowed phrase from The Location of Culture because it applies equally well to historiographical and fictional retellings of the past, and because writers of fiction and historians seemed equally interested during the 1990s in interrogating history. Wright and Watson are just two of a number of Indigenous novelists (see, for example, Kim Scott and Bruce Pascoe) who were producing historical counternarratives of the nation during the 1990s, from 'the other side of the frontier'.' (Introduction)

1 Insatiable Appetites : Vampires, Crocodiles and Colonisers in Beth Yahp’s The Crocodile Fury and Mudrooroo’s Master of the Ghost Dreaming Series Kate Hall , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Studies : Reading History, Culture and Identity 2010; (p. 168-183)
1 Disrupting the Past: Magical Realism and Historical Revision in Australian Fiction Kate Hall , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sharing Spaces : Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Responses to Story, Country and Rights 2006; (p. 69-85)
1 Harmony and Discord : Evocations of Hybridity in Theory, Culture, and Australian Magical Realism Kate Hall , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Antithesis , no. 14 2004; (p. 111-123)
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