Eleanor Dark (1901–1985)
Autor de The Timeless Land
Sobre El Autor
Créditos de la imagen: Olive Cotton, 1911-2003. Portrait of Eleanor Dark 1945 [picture].
National Library of Australia, nla.pic-an9070735
National Library of Australia, nla.pic-an9070735
Series
Obras de Eleanor Dark
Obras relacionadas
Goodbye to Romance: Stories by New Zealand and Australian Women Writers, 1930-1988 (1989) — Contribuidor — 10 copias
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Nombre canónico
- Dark, Eleanor
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1901-08-26
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 1985-09-11
- Lugar de sepultura
- Blackheath Cemetery, Blackheath, New South Wales, Australia
- Género
- female
- Nacionalidad
- Australia
- Lugar de nacimiento
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Lugar de fallecimiento
- Katoomba, New South Wales, Australia
- Lugares de residencia
- Katoomba, New South Wales, Australia
Burwood, New South Wales, Australia
Montville, Queensland, Australia
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia - Educación
- Redlands College for Girls
- Ocupaciones
- secretary
novelist - Relaciones
- O'Reilly, Dowell (father)
Dark, Eric (husband) - Organizaciones
- Fellowship of Australian Writers
- Premios y honores
- Australian Literature Society Gold Medal for Literature (twice)
- Agente
- Curtis Brown
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Premios
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 12
- También por
- 1
- Miembros
- 694
- Popularidad
- #36,476
- Valoración
- 3.8
- Reseñas
- 18
- ISBNs
- 59
- Idiomas
- 2
- Favorito
- 3
Set over four days in the aftermath of a car crash that critically injures Doctor Nigel Hendon, the story is revealed in fragments; flash backs; feverish dialogue contrasted with mannered calm; disjointed interior monologues; and characters starting and failing to express their fractured thoughts in words. There are four main characters: Nigel; his wife Linda; his mother Mrs Hendon, and the young nurse Kay. (Who fancies Nigel even though he hasn't given her any encouragement at all). The plot is minimal: this is a novel of ideas.
A sense of transgression arises as the reading progresses because Dark is exploring territory that is viewed differently today. Yesterday I posted about Thomas More's 16th century political satire Utopia, because I found myself comparing More's discredited economic ideas of shared ownership of property, with the failed Utopia in Prelude to Christopher exploring an equally discredited form of social organisation. It makes for uneasy reading when it is eventually revealed that Nigel, a brilliant young man whose mother has great ambitions for him, abandons a conventional future to set up an island colony based on the principles of eugenics. He bases the criteria for membership on medical suitability: presciently provoking today's reader to remember the Lebensborn (1935-1945), Nigel wants healthy bodies and minds to breed a better society. But because he loves his wife Linda dearly and cannot leave her behind, he compromises his own rules because her family has a history of mental illness.
But Nigel's colony does not fail because of Linda or because of the moral contradictions in its 'scientific' approach. It fails because of the collective madness of World War 1 mass hysteria.
As the stigma around mental illness fades in our own time, this novel — written nearly a century ago — was groundbreaking in the way it challenged prevailing beliefs about mental illness. It shows how Nigel's 'chosen people' — selected for their superior physical and mental qualities — descend into an irrational rabble not unlike the boys in William Golding's Lord of the Flies though that wasn't written until twenty years later in 1954. Nigel's 'superior' people riot with escalating violence because they want to leave: they want to join the excited hordes clamouring to send their young men to be slaughtered in the war.
And Linda? The novel depicts Linda being subjected to gaslighting by her uncle and by local gossip as an example of how nurture can be just as harmful as nature.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2024/01/05/prelude-to-christopher-1934-by-eleanor-dark/… (más)