‘Not well received’ at Harvard, these two writers maintain the rage

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Writer Tony Birch reflects on how Miles Franklin Award-winner Kim Scott has intrigued and inspired him.

One of the many pleasures of the Writers on Writers series is the fascinating variety of responses to the brief, which invites a distinguished Australian author to reflect on a fellow writer who has intrigued and inspired them. The effect of personalising this engagement is thrilling: each book is an idiosyncratic distillation of the literary concerns and qualities of both writers; and serves as a lively, accessible introduction to their work.

Kim Scott is a novelist who draws deeply on the oral histories of his Wirlomin Noongar people of the south-east coast of Western Australia to challenge the colonial archive.Birch centres this by opening his essay with a crystallising moment at an Australian Studies conference.

Scott is a novelist who draws deeply on the oral histories of his Wirlomin Noongar people of the south-east coast of Western Australia to challenge the colonial archive. The Bringing Them Home report was published while he was writing, which is his first novel to wrestle explicitly with these dissonant histories, one recorded in ancient traditions of oral storytelling; the other in ink and paper.Birch has a PhD in history and has taught Australian and Aboriginal history.

 

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