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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day One
Diary of a Free Woman
Day One: True Love
23 December 2009
Today is the day my marriage will end.
(Although I don’t know this while I sweat in the Perth heat, crushing spices and simmering two vegetable curries for my husband’s mother’s family Christmas party.)
My mother-in-law’s annual family Christmas party is a thing of tradition; and, for people like me – from another planet, and with a small family far away in the Balkans, where Christmases are different - a thing of some discomfort. But I have been in Australia for ten years; I like being here; and I have always liked observing and pretending I belong. It’s a good game, comforting to strays and hosts alike.
Twelve Days of Christmas is a diary in twelve parts. It maps out my marriage breakup and examines the role of writing in the process of revelation – no: the creation – of identity. Be warned, gentle reader. It contains strong language, nudity, sexual references and adult themes. ... read more
Written by Danijela Kambaskovic-Sawers on 31-01-2010, 3 user comments
This is what a war crime looks like
Actually, no. This is what a civilian massacre by Blackwater contractors in Iraq looks like.
Written by Jacinda Woodhead on 30-01-2010, 2 user comments
Vale Alistair Hulett
David Rovics writes:
Today is my daughter Leila's fourth birthday, and while this occasion brings my thoughts back to the day she was born, the past 24 hours have otherwise been full of fairly devastating news.
If the left can admit to having icons, then two of them have just died. Yesterday it was the great historian and activist Howard Zinn, with whom I had the pleasure of sharing many stages around the US over many years. Much has been written about Zinn's death at the age of 87, and I think many more people will be discovering his groundbreaking work who may not have heard of him til now.
And then less than a full day later I heard the news that my dear friend, comrade and fellow musician Alistair Hulett died today. He was thirty years younger than Professor Zinn, 57 years old, give or take a year (I'm shit at remembering birthdays, but he was definitely still years shy of 60). Ally had an aggressive form of cancer in his liver, lungs and stomach.
I last saw Alistair last summer at his flat in Glasgow where he had lived with his wife Fatima for many years. (Fatima, a wonderful woman about whom Ally wrote his love song, “Militant Red.”) He seemed healthy and spry as usual, with plenty to say about the state of the world as always. He was working on a new song about a Scottish anarchist who had run the English radio broadcast for the Spanish Republic in the 1930's.
I first met Ally in 2005, at least that's what he said. I seem to recall meeting him earlier than that, but maybe it's just that I was already familiar with his music and had been to his home town of Glasgow many times before I actually met him. His reputation preceded him – in my mind he was already one of those enviably great guitarists who along with people like Dick Gaughan had done so much to breath new life into the Scottish folk music tradition. I had also already heard some of his own wonderful compositions, sung by him as well as by other artists.
In 2005 the Scottish left was well mobilized, organizing the people's response to the G8 meetings that were happening in the wooded countryside not far from Edinburgh. Alistair was involved both as an organizer and a musician, and we hung out in Edinburgh, in Glasgow, outside a detention center somewhere, and out by the G8 meetings in an opulent little town with an unpronounceable Scottish name.
I asked him then if he wanted to do a tour with me in the US. He took me up on that a year or so later and we traveled from Boston to Minneapolis over the course of two weeks or so, doing concerts along the way. Many people who came to our shows were already familiar with Alistair's music, while many were hearing it for the first time and were generally well impressed with his work as well as his congenial personality, despite the fact that many people reported to me discreetly that they couldn't understand a word he was saying.
Americans aren't so good with accents at the best of times, and to make matters worse Alistair was largely doing songs from his Red Clydeside CD, which is a themed recording all about the anti-capitalist/anti-imperialist rebellion that rocked Glasgow in 1917. Naturally the songs from that CD are also sung in a Glaswegian dialect which can only be understood by non-Scottish people in written form, if you take your time.
Alistair was determined to retaliate for my having organized a tour for us in the US, which he did three years later in a big way, organizing a five-week tour for us of Australia and New Zealand from late November 2008 until early January of last year.
Our tour began in Christchurch, New Zealand. This turned out to seem very fitting, since Christchurch is where Alistair moved as a teenager, along with his parents and his sister, in the mid-1960's. He resented having to leave Glasgow, which was at that time a major hotbed of the 1960's global cultural and political renaissance -- a renaissance which had decidedly not yet made its way to little Christchurch, New Zealand. Alistair described to me how the streets of this small city were filled with proper English ladies wearing white gloves when he moved there as a restless youth.
The folk scare came to Christchurch, though, as with so many other corners of the world at that time, and at the age of 17 Alistair was in the heart of it. Our tour of New Zealand included a whole bunch of great gigs, but it was also like a tour of the beginning of Alistair's varied musical career. All along the way on both the south and north islands I met people Alistair hadn't seen for years or sometimes decades. I cringed as someone gave us a bootleg recording of Alistair as a teenager, figuring wrongly that it would be a reminder of a musically unstable early period, but it turned out to be a fine recording, a vibrant but nuanced rendition of some old songs from the folk tradition.
After two weeks exploring the postcard-perfect New Zealand countryside, smelling a lot of sheep shit, and getting in a car accident while parked, we headed to Sydney. Upon arriving in Australia I discovered a whole other side to Alistair and his impact on the world. Though his Scottish accent never seemed to thin out much, he lived for 25 years in Sydney and was on the ground floor of the Australian punk rock scene, playing in towns and cities throughout Australia with his band, Roaring Jack. The band broke up decades ago but still has a loyal following throughout the country, as I discovered first-hand night after night. In contrast with the nuanced and often quite obscure stories told in the traditional ballads which Alistair rendered so well, Roaring Jack was a brash, in-your-face musical experience, championing the militant end of the Australian labor movement and leftwing causes generally, fueled by equal parts rage against injustice, love of humanity and alcohol.
Since the 90's Alistair has lived in his native Glasgow, while regularly touring elsewhere in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand. He's played in various musical ensembles including most recently his band the Malkies, but mostly his work has been as a songwriter and solo performer, also recording and occasionally touring with the great fiddler of Fairport Convention fame, Dave Swarbrick. His more recent songs have run the gamut from a strictly local Glasgow song written to support a campaign to save a public swimming pool to the timelessly beautiful song recorded by June Tabor and others, “He Fades Away.”
“He Fades Away” is about an Australian miner dying young of asbestosis, from massive exposure to asbestos, a long-lasting, daily tragedy of massive proportions fueled by, well, greedy capitalists. It is surely more than a little ironic that Alistair was taken from us at such a young age by the industrial-world epidemic known as cancer, so much like the subject of his most well-known song.
The song is written from the perspective of the wife of a miner who is dying of asbestosis. The melody of the song is so beautiful that quoting the lyrics can't come close to doing it justice, and I won't do the song that injustice here – just go to the web and search for “He Fades Away,” it's right there in various forms.
It is undoubtedly a privilege of someone like Alistair that he will be remembered passionately by people, young and old and on several continents, long after today – by friends, lovers, fellow activists, fellow musicians, and many times as many fans. And he will long be remembered also as one of the innumerable great people, including so many great musicians, who died too young.
On our last tour, so recently, he was meeting new friends and renewing old friendships every single day, so very full of life. Among the friendships he was renewing was that with his elderly parents, who came to our show in Brisbane, a couple hours from where they retired on the east coast of Australia. Though the exact causes of Alistair's illness will probably never be known, it seems to be a hallmark not just of war, but especially of the industrialized world's ever-worsening cancer epidemic, that so many parents have to see their children die so young. ... read more
Written by Jeff Sparrow on 29-01-2010, No comments
‘we found ourselves tied up in a room containing a number of weapons and men in leather gimp masks’
My old email address has pretty much sunk under the weight of the spam it attracts and so, of necessity, I've become something of a connoisseur of the 419 letter, the literary genre of our time. What's really interesting about email spam is how it usually accords to a strict moral economy. On the one hand, the recipient is made to feel that, by responding, they're performing a deed of unsurpassed generosity (helping the ill, rescuing an orphan, etc); on the other, the letter almost invariably invites the respondent to engage in explicit chicanery, by helping themselves to money stolen from an impoverished state or claiming a prize that isn't theirs or whatever). In that sense, 419 letters are kind of like medieval morality plays, in which Messrs Gullible, Vain and Greedy march inexorably to their date with Mr Fraud. ... read more
Written by Jeff Sparrow on 29-01-2010, 2 user comments
Art isn’t about buildings, it’s about culture
Premier Brumby describes Peter Bachelor as being someone who is ‘passionate about the arts’. Apparently he was involved in the construction of the Arts Centre and also regularly attends the theatre, concerts and dance performances, so he must be passionate about the arts. He must.
But where is he? Where is our new arts minister? Where was our former arts minister, Lynne Kosky, when we needed her? Out complicating our train system, her other huge folio. Peter Bachelor too has another folio – energy and resources. It seems to me that the arts folio is a bit of a joke in state politics. Does anyone actually take the arts seriously? Has Premier Brumby not learned anything from the Lynne Kosky debacle? By appointing the arts folio to a minister that already has a huge folio he has once again shown artists that he perceives art to be not quite so important, a side gig, a hobby. A minister swamped by a demanding folio will rarely find the time to give the arts folio the attention it needs and deserves. There are also rumors circulating in the press that Mr Bachelor is retiring at the end of the year, yet another blow to an already suffering art culture. ... read more
Written by Koraly Dimitriadis on 28-01-2010, No comments
I’m not buying it
I miss John Howard on Australia Day. That's what I thought this afternoon when I walked out of Eastside shops to see several teenage girls draped in Australian flags, off to some underage-drinking barbeque. Is that nationalism, kids? Do you seriously feel like part of a collective democratic project worth wearing around your neck? Or does it just go with the outfit?
At the risk of sounding like Grandma Marx, by crikey, why don't the young people rebel?
Because there's nothing to argue with when Australia and the flag have become brands. Rebelling against brands is a pointless exercise. Most brands targeted at the young already associate themselves with rebellion. To rebel, all you can do is associate yourself with a different brand - one of the wet-blanket, non-rebellious ones. But then you just look weak. If there is another option (like DIY? Find your new punk look in K-mart) it would take a strong teenager to go there. ... read more
Written by Jennifer Mills on 26-01-2010, 10 user comments
‘Yo comments are whack’
For all those who have comment fatigue due to the racist, sexist, homophobic and grammatically incorrect commenting occurring all over the internet.
Disclaimer: I'm not opposed to a lack of capitalisation.
Written by Jacinda Woodhead on 25-01-2010, 1 user comment
Buskers and Hawkers
If a musician plays music at home, he does it for his own pleasure. If he’s invited to a party, to play with friends, he does that to entertain his buddies and himself. He wouldn’t expect to be paid for it. He might go out onto the street and busk. Perhaps for some exposure or coins, but he’s not expecting to make a fortune. His greatest pleasure will come from the brief smiles and positive comments of those passing by. If he’s invited to play in a café, there might not be payment as such, but he’d expect to get something from the takings at the door. Maybe a meal and drinks. Any venue with a stage has an obligation to pay him for the music he plays for their audience. In the music industry that seems to be obvious.
When I started blogging for Overland it was because I’d just been to the Overland Master Class and had made friends with a few of the people in the group. I started up a blog because of those buddies and a few weeks later Maxine Clarke asked me to help out on the Overloaded project. So for me it’s always been more or less like that musician getting called to one party or another. It’s always been a pleasure. ... read more
Written by Alec Patric on 25-01-2010, 21 user comments
don’t think, just give.
i hope i'll be forgiven the intense earnestness of this post but i like to think we're all give-a-fuck kind of people here at overland.org.au.
so before what promises to be a gorgeous weekend with loved ones and booze and food and probably safe shelter: if you've been thinking about haiti, and how you might help, stop thinking about it and just do it. if it's five dollars or a hundred, the aid agencies need money* on the ground right now. msf, red cross, doesn't matter. just do it soon because every dollar and every minute counts.
these are the links [to secular NGOs] i could find online where you can make a secure donation:
australian red cross [working with haiti red cross and international red cross/red crescent]
medecins sans frontieres [doctors without borders]
unicef
oxfam
Written by Karen Pickering on 22-01-2010, 2 user comments
blogging, payment, the ABC and Overland
As luck would have it, we've sent out a call for people to blog at Overland just as a controversy has developed over the ABC Book Show doing more-or-less the same thing. The arts industry's reliance upon free labour is a fraught issue; what follows is an attempt to think the implications of what we're doing at Overland and why.
Historically, Overland has always depended upon a huge amount of volunteer labour. In its early years, the contributors weren't paid and the original editor, Stephen Murray-Smith, subsidised the journal through his own efforts. Since then, Overland, like other journals, has gone through a certain amount of professionalisation, with grants from various funding bodies covering salaries for some editorial and administrative staff, alongside payments for authors. ... read more
Written by Jeff Sparrow on 22-01-2010, 19 user comments
‘Who cares about gender at a time like this?’
According to a post on the SPUNC blog last week, independent Australian publishing does.
Laurie Steed wrote that there aren’t enough women submitting to journals and publishers in Australia:
Of the 200 submissions received by Affirm Press, around 80 percent have been from male writers.
This year also sees the release of the next Sleepers almanac, a collection which often features the best women writers in the country, and yet, according to Sleepers Editorial Director Louise Swinn, the majority of their submissions are also from male writers, be they brilliant, brooding, or mildly unhinged.
Which begs the question: where are all the broken-hearted women today? Where are the open-soul, pen scratching into the page of the first-draft, thesaurus-scouring, story-shaping women when we need them?
Written by Jacinda Woodhead on 20-01-2010, 15 user comments
Novel Writers
I have a friend who’s been published everywhere. A few times over, in fact. He’s won awards. Published two or three books of poetry. But he’s got something against blogging and it’s an issue we argue about. I suppose he sees it as irredeemably trivial and as superficial as Facebook. I concede that it can be. No doubt there’s a great deal of mediocre writing in the blogosphere. Then again, most of the writing on the shelves of a bookstore are worse than mediocre. And the point I try to make is that there’s the possibility of screen brilliance. That in fact, I’ve seen it. That I’ve been moved and inspired by writing I’ve found on the blogs of Australian writers.
A medium will always offer a set of potentials. A stage poet has physical presence to embody a poem. There’s the literal voice of the poet defining the voice of the poem, when on the page the same poem can speak in different voices, and reveal nuances of tone and suggestion even the author wasn’t aware of. On the stage a poet brings a personality and presents himself as the author. What they’re wearing on a given day is going to have an effect on what we hear, no matter how superficial that is. It’s hard to enjoy the poem if we don’t like its author. That goes the other way as well. A poet can dress fashionably and present herself with demure calculation and we applaud because we’re taken in by that pantomime. ... read more
Written by Alec Patric on 19-01-2010, 12 user comments
‘we don’t need soldiers … there’s no war here’
That's from al Jazeera; here's the Guardian's account:
The US military's takeover of emergency operations in Haiti has triggered a diplomatic row with countries and aid agencies furious at having flights redirected. ... read more
Written by Jeff Sparrow on 19-01-2010, 3 user comments
Murderer Brumby stop killing our art
It seems Premier Brumby has been on a bit of a rampage the last year, killing off our art, and apparently, this is only the beginning. I thought it couldn’t get any worse when the skills reform was introduced mid last year, putting TAFE out of reach for many Victorians. This legislation stabbed at the heart of Melbourne’s thriving art scene by abolishing government-funded places for students with equivalent or higher qualifications and forcing them to pay full fees, which many are unable to afford. This change hurt the arts – writing, film, music – because many people study art when they’ve matured and come into themselves and this is usually after having studied and worked in another industry. I wrote an article about the changes on my blog and Overland last year and you can read that here. But Brumby didn't stop there. The same time the TAFE changes were introduced, new liquor licensing regulations were also brought in that have severely hurt Melbourne’s unique live music scene. ... read more
Written by Koraly Dimitriadis on 18-01-2010, 5 user comments
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