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‘Touching the edges of cyclones’: Thea Astley and the winds of revelation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 June 2018

Chrystopher J. Spicer*
Affiliation:
chrystopher.spicer@jcu.edu.au
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Abstract

Thea Astley once commented that, ‘everybody is living on a cyclonic edge’, and that many of her characters were ‘always touching on the edges of cyclones’. In Queensland literature, cyclones often appear as tropes of apocalypse: new worlds of person and place are revealed out of the destruction of the old. In Astley's novel A Boat Load of Home Folk (1968), the tempestuous forces of personal cyclones, as well as those of the cyclone destroying the island around them, overtake a group of stranded cruise passengers, and consequently place and person assume unique meanings as the characters try to survive. Although one of her least-known works, A Boat Load of Home Folk is a profound novel of human experience in which Astley uses the elemental cyclone as a trope of apocalypse that is both an instrument of destruction and a catalyst of revelation.

Type
General articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2018 

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