Blue Lake: Finding Dudley Flats and the West Melbourne Swamp
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Blue Lake: Finding Dudley Flats and the West Melbourne Swamp
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Blue Lake: Finding Dudley Flats and the West Melbourne Swamp
I'm here already, in the bleak, awful hour on Dudley Flats in which the final dereliction of Elsie Williams will come to pass. I'm beginning with it, so you won't be under any illusion as to how it ends.
I'm here already, in the bleak, awful hour on Dudley Flats in which the final dereliction of Elsie Williams will come to pass. I'm beginning with it, so you won't be under any illusion as to how it ends.
I'm here already, in the bleak, awful hour on Dudley Flats in which the final dereliction of Elsie Williams will come to pass. I'm beginning with it, so you won't be under any illusion as to how it ends.
In Blue Lake, David Sornig examines how the 8km-square zone to the west of central Melbourne became the city's blind spot. Once a fertile wetland with a large blue saltwater lagoon, it passed through various incarnationsβfrom boneyards and rubbish tips; through the Depression-era Dudley Flats shanty town; to the modern-day docks. Through it all, one thing that has persisted is its uncanny, liminal quality.
As well as being a social history and a psychogeographic contemplation, Blue Lake is a biography of three specific charactersβElsie Williams, a Bendigo-born singer of Afro-Caribbean origin; Jack Peacock, the king of Dudley Flats' tip-scavenging economy; and Lauder Heinrich Rogge, a German hermit who lived for decades with sixty dogs on a stranded ship. By charting the rises and falls in their individual fortunes, Sornig reveals much about the race and class divides of their times and explores questions about those strange and singular places in the urban fabric where chaos is difficult to contain.
In masterful prose, Sornig reveals cracks in the colonial mythology of the ordered vision of progressive, urban Melbourneβa place where identities, both personal and public, have never quite been resolved. In doing so, he encourages readers to look harder at the places they live inβat the streets they walk, the buildings they enter, the empty spaces they passβand to see in them intricate layers of time and history that have been hidden from view.
Book Hero Magic summarised reviews for this book. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! HOW HAS THIS BEEN REVIEWED?
Blue Lake: Finding Dudley Flats and the West Melbourne Swamp by David Sornig presents a richly layered depiction of Melbourne's history, focusing on overlooked places and inhabitants. Reviewers praise Sornig's ability to weave time shifts and personal insights into a narrative that contemplates the city's cultural and physical evolution. The book is noted for its lyrical prose and nuanced exploration of forgotten characters and places, evoking the work of writers like V.S. Naipaul and W.G. Sebald.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781925322743
Publisher: Scribe Publications
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 03 September 2018
Country: Australia
Imprint: Scribe Publications
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Width: 153.0mm
Height: 234.0mm
Weight: 0g
Pages: 400
About the Author
David Sornig is the author of the novel Spiel, (UWAP, 2009). His fiction and non-fiction writing has featured in the Griffith Review, Harvard Review, Adelaide Review and Kill Your Darlings. He has lectured in creative writing and literary studies at a number of Australian universities and currently teaches in the creative writing program at the University of Melbourne. His essay 'Jubilee- A Hymn for Elsie Williams on Dudley Flats' was a finalist for the 2015 Melbourne Prize for Literature Writers Prize and his subsequent work on Blue Lake was supported by a State Library of Victoria Creative Fellowship. He lives in Melbourne.
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