This study discusses modern Australian life writing by sons who
focus on their fathers. Termed patriography (by Couser) or The
Son's Book of the Father (by Freadman), this rich field of
relational autobiography offers insights into modes of masculinity,
notions of identity and heritage and the ethics of representation.
The current proliferation of 'father memoirs' in the marketplace
demonstrates that such writing is fulfilling and being fuelled by
the need to better understand the traditionally lesser-known
parent.
Beginning with an analysis of the paradigmatic case of the
sub-genre, Edmund Gosse's Victorian masterpiece 'Father and Son',
the study moves quickly on to embrace its Australian literary
frame, demonstrating Gosse's influence on a range of classic
Australian autobiographies, including Hal Porter's 'The Watcher on
the Cast-Iron Balcony'. Mansfield then offers five 'case studies'
on the seminal works of the current era: Raimond Gaita's 'Romulus,
My Father'; Richard Freadman's 'Shadow of Doubt'; Peter Rose's
'Rose Boys'; John Hughes's 'The Idea of Home'; and Robert Gray's
'The Land I Came Through Last'.
How do these authors 'perform' their masculinity in the act of
writing the father? What are some of the ethical complexities that
must be negotiated when representing the reticent-laconic in
autobiography? And, ultimately, how does one decide what an ethical
representation of the father is? These are some of the questions
Mansfield addresses in 'Australian Patriography', the first study
of its kind in Australian literature.
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