Reading the 'Gold Coast Symphony' in Thea Astley's 'The Acolyte'

Authors

  • Alison Bartlett University of Western Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2019.29

Keywords:

Thea Astley, musicological history, poetics of place, politics of gender and sexuality, national formations, 'The Acolyte'

Abstract

Thea Astley is a figure who is strongly associated with music, both in her life interests and in her writing rhythms and allusions; this article investigates the uses of music in her 1972 novel The Acolyte. Drawing on a recent genre of critical musicology that understands music to be a social practice, The Acolyte is read in relation to mid-twentieth-century cultural debates around the development of a distinctive Australian classical music. Centring on the blind pianist turned composer Jack Holberg, The Acolyte is grounded in the Gold Coast hinterland as an inspiring and generative landscape, in contrast with the desolate outback favoured in national mythologies. Holberg’s ‘Gold Coast Symphony’, arguably the turning point of the novel, imaginatively writes this coastal fringe of urban debauchery into the vernacular of classical music through its performance in conservative 1960s Brisbane. In this article, I read The Acolyte as a novel positioned within an Australian musicological history that intersects with the poetics of place, the politics of gender and sexuality, and ongoing national formations through cultural production.

Author Biography

  • Alison Bartlett, University of Western Australia

    Alison Bartlett is Associate Professor of English and Literary Studies at the University of Western Australia. She has published widely on Australian literature, feminist memory and cultures of maternity. Her most recent book is Flirting in the Era of #MeToo: Negotiating Intimacy (with Kyra Clarke and Rob Cover, Palgrave, 2019), and she is currently writing on the uses of classical music in Australian literature.

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Published

2019-12-01

How to Cite

Bartlett, A. (2019). Reading the ’Gold Coast Symphony’ in Thea Astley’s ’The Acolyte’. Queensland Review, 26(2), 232-244. https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2019.29

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