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Shifting timescapes and the significance of the Mine in Alexis Wright's Carpentaria

Nolan, Maggie
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Abstract
This article proposes a reading of Alexis Wright’s epic novel Carpentaria that focuses on the mine and its impacts as central to any understanding of the novel. Carpentaria offers a stark portrayal of how resource extraction is intimately linked with both colonisation and capitalism and is sustained through state-sanctioned violence and nationalist ideologies. This article explores the dichotomy between Normal Phantom, who views mining as just another phenomenon in the vast expanse of time, and his son Will, who fights the mine on the understanding that it is an unprecedented threat to the survival of the Waanyi people and their Country. Although I suggest that this wider debate, and the forms of agency it represents, remains unresolved in the novel, I conclude with a meditation on the critically neglected character of Kevin who complicates the novel’s uneasy resolution. In the light of ongoing debates about the Adani mine, Carpentaria is more relevant than ever.
Keywords
Date
2020
Type
Journal article
Journal
Australian Literary Studies
Book
Volume
35
Issue
2
Page Range
1-21
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Arts and Humanities
Faculty of Education and Arts
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Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
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Controlled
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