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Thu, 1 Jan 2015

Foray into fiction for acclaimed writer

Drusilla Modjeska, one of Australia’s most highly acclaimed and best loved writers will deliver the 2014 Colin Roderick Lecture in Townsville on May 8.

Foray into fiction for acclaimed writer

Drusilla Modjeska, one of Australia’s most highly acclaimed and best loved writers will deliver the 2014 Colin Roderick Lecture in Townsville on May 8.

The lecture is titled ‘The Informed Imagination’ Writing PNG: Land of Unlikeness.

JCU’s Adjunct Professor Don Gallagher said the lecture would focus on Ms Modjeska’s recent novel, The Mountain, which weaves fact with fiction to create a story of “love, lust, grief and betrayal” set in Papua New Guinea on the brink of independence.

“Drusilla Modjeska is best known as a writer of works like Poppy, a biography of her mother, The Orchard, and Stravinsky’s Lunch, brilliant non-fiction works that employ some of the devices of fiction,” he said.

“With The Mountain, Drusilla Modjeska has undertaken a sweeping work of fiction ‘as intricate and powerful as the bark-cloth paintings at its heart’.”

Professor Gallagher said the lecture would trace the writer’s transition from non-fiction to fiction through the problems encountered in undertaking the ‘unlikeness’ of Papua New Guinea as a subject.

Born in England, Ms Modjeska lived for a number of years in Papua New Guinea before arriving in Australia in 1971.This novel is inspired by her experiences of Papua New Guinea during the late 1960s and early 1970s, the years leading up to independence, and by an intimate knowledge of some traditional communities.

The lecture is sponsored by James Cook University’s Foundation for Australian Literary Studies Limited (FALS Ltd).

Founded in 1966, the annual Colin Roderick Lecture honours the work of the late Professor Colin Roderick, an enthusiastic champion of Australian literature who became JCU’s Professor of English Literature in 1965.

Professor Roderick created FALS to foster the study of Australian literature. He himself published widely on Australian writers, edited Henry Lawson’s verse, fiction and letters and wrote biographies of Rosa Praed, Lawson, Leichardt and Miles Franklin.

Author’s background:

Drusilla Modjeska was born in London in 1946, the eldest of three sisters. At 20, she married an anthropologist, and together they travelled to Papua New Guinea. Her years there, including those as a student at the University of Papua New Guinea, laid the basis for her enduring interest in the Pacific. While The Mountain is not autobiographical, it makes full use of Drusilla Modjeska’s experience at the newly established University of Papua New Guinea and of her intimate knowledge of traditional communities still unchanged by European contact.

In 1971 Drusilla Modjeska moved to Australia, and within that decade graduated with a BA (Hons) in History from the Australian National University and a PhD in History from the University of New South Wales.

During these years of writing and publication Drusilla Modjeska held a teaching appointment at UTS, where she was part of the team that established the writing program, followed by research fellowships at the University of Sydney.

Although she did not return to Papua New Guinea until the 2000s, she maintained contact with many she had known during her years there. She read widely in Pacific, and especially PNG literature.

Drusilla Modjeska’s other books include Exiles At Home (1981), Poppy (1990), The Orchard (1994) and Stravinsky’s Lunch (1999).

Details:

COLIN RODERICK LECTURE 2013

Drusilla Modjeska

‘The Informed Imagination’ Writing PNG: Land of Unlikeness

Date: Thursday, May 8, 2014

Time: 6.00pm - 7.30pm

Location:  North Queensland Club, 146 Denham Street, Townsville

Admission by gold coin.

JCU Media Liaison: Caroline Kaurila, tel: (07) 4781 4586 or 0437 028 175.

Issued May 1, 2014