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Revenge as Cultural Catharsis in Moya Henderson’s Opera Lindy

McKenry, Timothy John
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Abstract
The death, during a camping trip in central Australia, of the nine-week-old baby, Azaria Chamberlain, and the subsequent trial, imprisonment and eventual exoneration of her mother, Lindy, for the murder of the child was a seminal event in recent Australian social history. The issues raised by this event, including sexism, racism, sectarianism and the abuse of power, left deep scars on the Australian psyche as the reaction of the Australian public throughout the incident diverged from the prevailing view of Australian identity as one characterised by ‘mate-ship’, egalitarianism, and a ‘fair-go’. This paper examines how Moya Henderson’s opera Lindy, functions not only to tell and reinterpret the story through a fragmented postmodern narrative, but also as an act of ‘cultural revenge’. In celebrating this retelling of the story through opera, one segment of Australian society is given the opportunity to punish, marginalise and re-educate another. Through an examination of the circumstances surrounding the commissioning and development of the opera, structural aspects of the narrative style employed in the opera, and the critical reception of the opera, the paper posits that Lindy represents a cultural tool that enables a catharsis through vengeance.
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Date
2020
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
Best Served Cold: Studies on Revenge
Volume
Issue
Page Range
115-125
Article Number
ACU Department
Non-faculty
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Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
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Controlled
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