<i>Jindabyne</i>’s Haunted Alpine Country: Producing (an) Australian Badland
Author(s) -
Anthony Lambert,
Catherine Simpson
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
m/c journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1441-2616
DOI - 10.5204/mcj.81
Subject(s) - indigenous , colonialism , modernity , movie theater , politics , history , vernacular , sociology , aesthetics , art history , literature , art , law , political science , archaeology , ecology , biology
What does it mean for [a] country to be haunted? In much theoretical work in film and Cultural Studies since the 1990s, the Australian continent, more often than not, bears traces of long suppressed traumas which inevitably resurface to haunt the present (Gelder and Jacobs; Gibson; Read; Collins and Davis). Felicity Collins and Therese Davis illuminate the ways Australian cinema acts as a public sphere, or “vernacular modernity,” for rethinking settler/indigenous relations. Their term “backtracking” serves as a mode of “collective mourning” in numerous films of the last decade which render unspoken colonial violence meaningful in contemporary Australia, and account for the “aftershocks” of the Mabo decision that overturned the founding fiction of terra nullius (7). Ray Lawrence’s 2006 film Jindabyne is another after-Mabo film in this sense; its focus on conflict within settler/ indigenous relations in a small local town in the alpine region explores a traumatised ecology and drowned country. More than this, in our paper’s investigation of country and its attendant politics, Jindabyne country is the space of excessive haunting and resurfacing engaging in the hard work of what Gibson (Transformations) has termed “historical backfill”, imaginative speculations “that make manifest an urge to account for the disconnected fragments” of country.
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