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A Wild Roguery: Bruce Chatwin's the Songlines Reconsidered

dc.contributor.authorNicholls, Christine
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-18T05:29:47Z
dc.date.available2025-12-18T05:29:47Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.date.updated2023-10-22T07:17:30Z
dc.description.abstractThis article revisits, analyzes and critiques Bruce Chatwin's 1987 bestseller, The Songlines, more than three decades after its publication. In Songlines, the book primarily responsible for his posthumous celebrity, Chatwin set out to explore the essence of Central and Western Desert Aboriginal Australians' philosophical beliefs. For many readers globally, Songlines is regarded as a - if not the - definitive entry into the epistemological basis, religion, cosmology and lifeways of classical Western and Central Desert Aboriginal people. It is argued that Chatwin's fuzzy, ill-defined use of the word-concept "songlines" has had the effect of generating more heat than light. Chatwin's failure to recognize the economic imperative underpinning Australian desert people's walking praxis is problematic: his own treks through foreign lands were underpropped by socioeconomic privilege. Chatwin's ethnocentric idée fixe regarding the primacy of "walking" and "nomadism," central to his Songlines thématique, well and truly preceded his visits to Central Australia. Walking, proclaimed Chatwin, is an elemental part of "Man's" innate nature. It is argued that this unwavering, preconceived, essentialist belief was a self-serving construal justifying Chatwin's own "nomadic" adventures of identity. Is it thus reasonable to regard Chatwin as a "rogue author," an unreliable narrator? And if so, does this matter? Of greatest concern is the book's continuing majority acceptance as a measured, accurate account of Aboriginal belief systems.
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen_AU
dc.identifier.citationNicholls, C. (2019). A Wild Roguery: Bruce Chatwin’s The Songlines Reconsidered. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, (9), 22–49. https://doi.org/10.18778/2083-2931.09.02
dc.identifier.issn2083-2931
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1885/733796542
dc.language.isoen_AUen_AU
dc.provenanceThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
dc.publisherLodz University Press
dc.rights© 2019 Christine Nicholls
dc.rights.licenseCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.sourceText Matters
dc.titleA Wild Roguery: Bruce Chatwin's the Songlines Reconsidered
dc.typeJournal article
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Access
local.bibliographicCitation.issue9
local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage49
local.bibliographicCitation.startpage22
local.contributor.affiliationNicholls, Christine, College of Science, ANU
local.contributor.authoruidNicholls, Christine, u2548939
local.description.notesImported from ARIES
local.identifier.absfor450113 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander religion and religious studies
local.identifier.absfor450601 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander astronomy and cosmology
local.identifier.absseo280114 - Expanding knowledge in Indigenous studies
local.identifier.ariespublicationu3102795xPUB5487
local.identifier.doi10.18778/2083-2931.09.02
local.identifier.scopusID2-s2.0-85075059016
local.identifier.thomsonIDWOS:000495865400002
local.type.statusPublished Version
publicationvolume.volumeNumber9

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