Category: x Blogging

Clemente/Catalyst Students Go the NSW Art Gallery: The Links between Literature and Art!

One of the most exciting things I do several times each year is conduct literature students to the NSW Art Gallery to explore the ways in which paintings and sculptures can hugely expand our understanding of the way literature communicates meaning. One of my students (thank you Joey!) right at the start of our tour…

Clemente/ Catalyst students visit NSW State Library and Shakespeare Room

What a great introduction to our imminent study of/ participation in a production of scenes from Shakespeare’s As You Like It! Thank you Julie for your wonderful tour of the resources in the Mitchell Library, the Dixon Library and the Shakespeare Room itself! We were taken through the Mitchell (fabulous space for letting the creative spirit soar!)…

Shakespeare’s Falstaff and Henry IV

Today we had some fabulous tutorials exploring the kind of language Shakespeare uses in the opening scenes of Henry IV. Here is the king trying to bind together his empire with a proposal that all the civil warmongering British unite in one force and go on a crusade to rescue Jerusalem from the “infidels”. This is such…

What Happens When Prose Turns to Drama: Clemente/ Catalyst Week 7

We had an intensive afternoon exploring the characteristics of Henry Lawson’s Prose (both journalism and short story). He was such an innovator in the way he managed with so few words to evoke so much, especially in the area of people’s feelings. He was also the writer who brought the life of Australian everyday usage…

Top Blogs- First Cull Autumn 2015

My students are performing miracles with their blogs. They are grasping and extending the content of the literature they are studying in the most creative ways. Poems and prose creations -giving expression to their own experience- are being grounded on traditional models from Shakespeare through to Charles Dickens & Matthew Arnold. Along with this they are…

Sunday Morning Bush Bash

Made it this morning to the best spot overlooking the Hawkesbury Sandstone Plateau- just before dawn: Lot’s of autumnal wildflowers out, most spectacular this Banksia Collina, abundant all along the ridge tops: And the moist autumnal weather brings out a profusion of spider webs: Near the end of the walk ( around a 12 Km…

Thomas Carlyle’s Wonderful Words Celebrating the Continuing Importance of the Printed Word

At the State Library Today, we also genuflected in front of these amazing words from that extraordinary 19th Century wordsmith, the historian Charles (to whom Dickens dedicated his Hard Times). To anyone who still reads and benefits from the written word, these words carved in Sydney sandstone inside the vestibule to the Mitchell Library will have a…

Art in the Age of Shakespeare: A Distant Mirror over 450 Years Ago!

Thank you all for your keen participation in today’s visit to the Renaissance section of the NSW Art Gallery. We all got a very good taste of the range of  art work from the period and the connections of all this work to Shakespeare’s imagination. Most powerfully this painting by Jacques Blanchard Mars and the Vestal…

The Invention of the Wrist Watch: The Work of the Devil?

In 1853 (the year that Dickens published Hard Times and Matthew Arnold published “The Scholar Gypsy” the Boston Watch Company was formed. This was the first company to begin developing that device that keeps us all chained to linear clock time, intensifying our stress and anxiety levels and robbing us of the childhood capacity to ignore…

As You Like It: Will Shakespeare…. what is it that we (are) like?

What a fantastic performance by the Bell Shakespeare Company at the Opera House Drama Theatre. Around 60 students from ACU and another 20 or so from the Clemente program witnessed this great event. Thank you all for attending. Shakespeare’s As You Like It is a play that appeals above all to our sense of order, our…

Literature and Life at Mission Australia Surry Hills- Week 3

Dawn over Kuring-gai Chase- North of Sydney 5 new students last night! That was fabulous and we had some really great discussions on what poetic language can do through its use of sound patterning, its use of connotations (rather than denotations) and its use of imagery (visual, tactile, kinetic etc)… And we had a wonderful…

Clemente Mission Australia Week 2 Continued

The Clemente Program being run from Australian Catholic University in close partnership with range of Welfare Organizations such as Mission Australia, was started some years ago by an American, Earl Shorris. Shorris had a vision that poverty stricken Americans needed a way in which they could reclaim their dignity, their creative spirit, their intelligence. He wrote a…

Autumn Semester 2015

Hi All, I am looking forward very much to working with you in all of the following units: Nineteenth Century Literature (ENGL200); Shakespeare & The Renaissance (ENGL210); Introduction to Literature (Clemente- Mission Australia Students, ENGL104); Learning in the Community (HUMA247)and (ARTS232). This is the space where I will be posting my weekly reflections on our…

William Blake and Patrick White

Patrick White was clearly deeply influenced by William Blake. Not only does his novel Riders in the Chariot (arguably his most radical religious novel) begin with a core quote about the power of the prophetic imagination from The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, but White’s obsession with explicitly exploring the transformative power of art, of literature is central…

D.H. Lawrence and Katherine Mansfield

Two extraordinary, brilliant writers who refused to fit into the cage that society wanted for them. There is David Herbert Lawrence with his wild sense of the power and sacredness of sexuality, of the way in which the rhythms of the universe are all in a constant state of creative flux and then there is Katherine…

David Malouf on Campus!

We had a wonderful lecture/ talk from David Malouf yesterday. His focus was on Fly Away Peter, but he also spent time sharing with us his sense of how we need to read his work, indeed any great literature, in order to connect with the experience that it is trying to engage us with. Literature, as…

20thC/ Visionary Imagination – Remembering Babylon- David Malouf- Auden’s “The Unknown Citizen”

David Malouf is arguably one of the finest authors writing in English today. His deep interest in the way imagination is a tool for understanding the world more completely than any scientific or psychological analysis might do. His vision- through story telling- of how early colonists might have responded to an outcast (Gemmy Fairley) shows…

David Malouf- Fly Away Peter

Next week David Malouf will be visiting us in person. This will be a fabulous opportunity to interact with one of the world’s leading authors. He was one of my teachers in my early undergraduate days at Sydney University. I remember him teaching Shakespeare and also contributing his poetry to our Sydney University Literary Club.…

The Visionary Imagination Week 7

What an amazing day viewing a specially created exhibition of Blake’s original Job engravings and then an extraordinary private showing and explanation of one of the contemporary Australian masters of Visionary Imagination, Brett Whiteley- at the Studio where he worked during his lifetime. While it was a small group we were very lucky to have…

Twentieth Century Literature Week 6: Modernism

The visit to the art gallery of NSW last week was a perfect introduction to what we entered into today. It makes so much more sense talking about Virginia Woolf’s “Stream of Consciousness” and T.S. Eliot’s fragmented narratives (“These fragments I have shored against my ruins”- The Waste Land) after having seen and discussed Picasso and…

Australian Literature Week 6: Mid Twentieth Century Poets

Today we spent time with Judith Wright, Oodgeroo Noonuccal and with Francis Webb (amongst several other twentieth century Australian poets: James McAuley, “Ern Malley”, Rosemary Dobson, Roland Robinson, A.D. Hope….). Judith Wright’s wonderful poem “Two Dreamtimes” records her poetic conversation with indigenous poet Kath Walker (Oodgeroo Noonuccal). The poem offers a tribute of reconciliation in…

Twentieth Century Literature: Art Gallery Visit: Modernism in Context

We had a fabulous time at the gallery today exploring how Modernism brought such a dramatically new way of seeing, expressing, singing “its” vision of reality. Rodin, Van Gogh, Picasso, Kirchner, Lucien Freud, Francis Bacon broke vehemently with their immediate past and brought a wholly new way of expression. This new way matches almost exactly…

Australian Literature- Week 5: Late Colonial Writing

Today we explored the writing of a group of impressive women writers who dared to challenge the stereotypes: Ada Cambridge (1844-1926), Louisa Lawson (1848-1920), Barbara Baynton (1857-1929) and Dame Mary Gilmore (1865-1962). All these women wrote passionately about their sense of being trapped within a male-dominated world in which women were treated with little dignity.…

Twentieth Century Literature: Poets of War and Charlie Chaplin.

Rupert Brooke, Edward Thomas, Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, Charlie Chaplin …. a catalogue of names that bring many different responses to war into focus. Rupert Brooke, who never actually saw battle, became the poetic spokesperson for England at the outbreak of war. His sentiments and language are strongly in harmony with the Georgian poets who…

William Blake- Visionary Imagination Week 4

Today we explored Blake’s letters and his deep sense of how his method of engraving provided him with not only a livelihood but with a literal and symbolic means of embodying his life’s purpose. Let’s take each of these focuses separately. Firstly, in his letters we get such a detailed account of the forces that shaped his…

William Blake and The Visionary Imagination Week 3

We broke new ground today! As well as addressing the question of whether art can transform the world (Blake’s persistent question) – and looking at George Gittoes’ amazing experiments with this in Afghanistan– we tackled two of the hardest poems in the Songs: The “Introduction” to Songs of Experience and “Earth’s Answer” to the Ancient Bard’s invitation to…

Australian Literature Week 3- Visit to the NSW Art Gallery!

Wow, what a wonderful turn-out: so many enthusiastic, willing participants for our whirlwind tour of Australian art from earliest colonial times through to Brett Whiteley and beyond… Climaxing in that wonderful painted sculpture by Lin Onus, the fruit-bat bedecked hills hoist: As I said about this image, it comes so close to being a perfect replication…

Twentieth Century Literature:

Great start to the Twentieth Century in 2014. Lovely to see so many keen, eager, engaged students: seriously! I have a sense you want to learn, find out, create. I hope some of you will actually complete those short poems on the magnolia or the white gum tree. This is a powerful way to understand…