Fotografía de autor

Katherine Jane Johnson

Autor de The Better Son

4 Obras 46 Miembros 8 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

También incluye: Katherine Johnson (2)

Obras de Katherine Jane Johnson

The Better Son (2016) 16 copias
Pescador's Wake (2009) 15 copias
Paris Savages (2019) 14 copias
Matryoshka (2018) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

This one of those stories that need to be told and remembered but is extremely unsettling and frustrating to read. It is perhaps unsurprising that a theme in the book is the exploration of who is actually the titular savage - the Europeans or the Badtjala. Is savagery the lack of the trappings of European culture or is it the exploitation and dehumanization of the Other? Is a man who hopes to secure his people's independence, health, and safety truly more frightening than the people who threaten those qualities in the pursuit of luxuries?

This book is unsettling precisely because it is based on true events, because these events shaped how non-Europeans are still viewed and treated in the West. Human zoos are a horrendous fact of history that any discussion of racism and exoticism needs to remember.

I appreciate that, as a white woman herself, Johnson wrote from the point of view of a German teen whose father brought the three Badtjala to Europe, rather than from the point of view of one of the Badtjala. It's an acknowledgment of her outsider status in telling this story. But it does leave me wanting to hear directly from the Badjtala and other groups that were subjected to experiences like this. I especially plan to look up Own Voices reviews of this book to see how it was received.
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Denunciada
irasobrietate | otra reseña | Aug 31, 2020 |
I reserved this impressive book at the library about a month ago after I read Jennifer's review at Goodreads and was not disappointed. It's a remarkable book.

It brought three other books to mind: Jane Sullivan's Little People which is a novel about people of short stature touring as exhibits (see my review rel="nofollow" target="_top">here); Paddy O'Reilly's The Wonders which exposes the morbid curiosity that lies behind not just the freak shows of the 19th century but also those contemporary ‘human interest’ stories that feature disabled people (see my review here); and Anouk Ride's The Grand Experiment which I read before I started this blog. A non-fiction account of real events and based on thorough research, The Grand Experiment is a different kind of Stolen Generations story, in which two young Nyungar boys were taken to Italy by a Benedictine monk from the New Norcia Monastery in WA, to become monks themselves. They went, apparently, with parental permission, and the plan was well-intentioned, the monks hoping to offer education and opportunities the boys could not have had on the mission. They met the Pope and other notables, but the extent of the education they purportedly received is dubious since neither left a written record. Conaci died in Europe, and Dirimera died soon after returning to Australia.

Paris Savages explores themes which arose from my reading of those three books. To what extent could 'exhibits' in a human zoo have any agency over the way they were represented, when the entire exercise was based on ambitions the participants did not share? In what ways could they be said to have given informed consent? How could they possibly have known what they were in for? Johnson's novel, based on thorough research, depicts the cultural shock that Anouk Ride discussed, and with the same difficulties: the documentary record is scanty, and there is no record at all of the Indigenous point-of-view. The author's note at the beginning of the book explains how she resolved this issue:
According to a retrospective on the subject in Paris in 2012, worldwide, between 1800 and 1958, over a billion spectators attended such acts, marvelling at more than 35,000 individuals, significantly influencing view on 'race'.

That latter date astonished me. These offensive forms of mass entertainment can't be consigned to the 19th century. They were still occurring during my childhood.
Johnson then refers the readers to the Afterword to see her sources, and then goes on to say...
Paris Savages builds on these scant records to envisage the story of Bonny, Jurano and Dorondera, Badtjala/Butchulla people from K'gari (Fraser Island). Rather than assuming Aboriginal viewpoints, the story is told through fictional characters related in the novel to the German engineer Louis Müller, who is known to have transported the group to Europe. (p.ix)

Johnson's achievement is to expose the human cost of Müller's 'scientific' ambitions. Bonny, Jurano and Dorondera agree to go because the Badtjala people are in decline after the massacres which accompany being dispossessed from their land, and Bonny hopes to be able to bring their plight to Queen Victoria's personal attention so that she will intervene. The plan is that they will travel to England after being exhibited in Europe, and nobody disabuses them of the improbability of such a meeting. By narrating the story mostly from the point of view of Müller's teenage daughter Hilda, Johnson shows the journey from naïveté to full awareness of betrayal. Müller always caves in to unconscionable exploitation of the people in his care, not just because he is under financial pressure because of the costs involved, but also because he shares the prevailing pseudo-scientific ideas of the German entrepreneurs and the scientists they use to justify what they are doing.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2019/10/14/paris-savages-by-katherine-johnson/… (más)
 
Denunciada
anzlitlovers | otra reseña | Oct 13, 2019 |
The Better Son is set in 1950s northern Tasmania and is written by Australian author Katherine Johnson. Essentially it's a story about two young boys who live on a dairy farm in Mole Creek and discover a hidden cave on their farm. Tommy and Kip retreat to the cave whenever they can escape their farm chores and explore the huge caverns, myriad tunnels, passages and underground rivers within. One day Tommy goes missing and Kip lies to his parents about what happened.

Tommy's disappearance and Kip's subsequent lie change his life from that moment and continue to haunt him for the next fifty years. The Better Son sees Kip facing the past in order to become a better person and a better father to his family.

The Better Son has won a number of prizes, and I can certainly see why. Johnson's writing is dark and atmospheric and the descriptions of a small dairy farming community and the secret underground world the boys discover really come alive on the page. I could hear the echoes of the boys' laughter, experience their awe and wonder at the huge caverns and immense stalactites, and yes, I even felt claustrophobic in a few places as well.

Johnson was inspired to write this novel after learning about two boys who discovered a cave in 1906. The boys kept the cave a secret for years, and it's now a popular tourist site in Tasmania's popular. This information adds yet another layer to the story.

The Better Son is a dark mystery that explores the power of secrets, guilt and regret on a family and the Tasmanian setting is unforgettable. Oh, and that cover!

* Copy courtesy of Ventura *
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Denunciada
Carpe_Librum | Dec 20, 2016 |
Katherine Johnson lives in Tasmania (she is the wife of Zoology Professor Craig Johnson) and this is her first novel. Although it is fiction, it is based on an incident in the Southern Ocean in 2003 when a fishing boat, illegally fishing in Australian waters, was chased and eventually arrested. Johnson’s story concerns the Uruguayan Pescador, which is spotted fishing for Patagonian Toothfish near Heard Island. The patrol vessel, Australis, is ordered to pursue and apprehend the Pescador, resulting in a long and dangerous chase in the Southern Ocean. The main story is of the captains of each vessel and of their wives at home. Julia faces a difficult pregnancy, and Margie has lost a son – both sorely miss their absent husbands. Carlos and his crew are hoping for a quick sale of their catch in Mauritius, which could give them the financial means to escape working for an unscrupulous Spanish fleet owner. Carlos could then return to his pregnant wife, Julia. However, to complicate the issue, Julia’s first love, Eduardo, is Carlos’ First Officer and best friend. When a mutinous Russian, the Ship’s Engineer, seizes control while the boat is under pursuit, Carlos and his crew are in further peril. Meanwhile, Dave, Captain of the Australis is also anxious to return to his wife, Margie. Margie contacts Julia in an attempt to find a way of getting both husbands back safely. Johnson weaves a number of themes into the novel – some more successfully than others. There are strong environmental messages about over-fishing, especially the long-lining of Toothfish which drastically depletes populations and also results in the killing of seabirds, including Albatrosses. Overall, this is an interesting and exciting novel with believable main characters. However, the writing is sometimes a little didactic and Johnson perhaps tries to include too many side issues. For example, mention of the over-exploitation of Tasmania’s forests, while important, is not really relevant.… (más)
 
Denunciada
dwate | 4 reseñas más. | Feb 23, 2010 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
4
Miembros
46
Popularidad
#335,831
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
8
ISBNs
18