The Melbourne Athenaeum Library

Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Black Saturday : not the end of the story / Peg Fraser.

By: Publication details: Clayton, Victoria : Monash University Publishing, 2018.Description: ix, 266 pages : illustrations (some colour), map (colour) ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781925523683
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 363.37909945 23
LOC classification:
  • SD421.34.A8 F73 2018
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1.The Map: Black Saturday in Strathewen -- 2.The Jack: An Introduction to Strathewen -- 3.The Poetry Tree: Memorials -- 4.The Posters: Loss, Anger and Opportunity -- 5.The Mobile Phone: Narratives, Testimony and History -- 6.The Chook: Bushfire and Gender -- 7.The Hard Hat: Place, Home and Rebuilding -- 8.The Chimney: Conclusions -- 9.The Back Story.
Summary: The Victorian bushfires of February 2009 captured the attention of all Australians and made headlines around the world. One hundred and seventy-three people lost their lives, the greatest number from any bushfire event in this nation?s history. In the wake of this tragedy much media and public commentary emphasised recovery, resilience, community, self-sufficiency and renewed determination. Peg Fraser, working as a Museum Victoria curator with survivors in the small settlement of Strathewen, listened to these stories but also to other, more challenging narratives. The memories and thoughts that Fraser heard, and gives voice to in this book, complicate much of what we thought we knew about the experience of catastrophic natural events. Although all members of the same community, Strathewen?s survivors lived through Black Saturday and its aftermath in ways that were often very different from each other. Beginning each chapter with an object from the bushfires ? among them a Trewhella jack, a burned mobile phone, a knitted chook and a brick chimney ? Fraser explores and reveals how each person?s identity, including as a man or a woman with a particular social position in the town, impacted upon experiences and understandings of loss, survival and even the future. This is historical truth of the most vital, affecting and powerful kind.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item reserves
Book Melbourne Athenaeum Library Non-Fiction 363.379 FRA Available 068869
Total reserves: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: 1.The Map: Black Saturday in Strathewen -- 2.The Jack: An Introduction to Strathewen -- 3.The Poetry Tree: Memorials -- 4.The Posters: Loss, Anger and Opportunity -- 5.The Mobile Phone: Narratives, Testimony and History -- 6.The Chook: Bushfire and Gender -- 7.The Hard Hat: Place, Home and Rebuilding -- 8.The Chimney: Conclusions -- 9.The Back Story.

The Victorian bushfires of February 2009 captured the attention of all Australians and made headlines around the world. One hundred and seventy-three people lost their lives, the greatest number from any bushfire event in this nation?s history. In the wake of this tragedy much media and public commentary emphasised recovery, resilience, community, self-sufficiency and renewed determination. Peg Fraser, working as a Museum Victoria curator with survivors in the small settlement of Strathewen, listened to these stories but also to other, more challenging narratives. The memories and thoughts that Fraser heard, and gives voice to in this book, complicate much of what we thought we knew about the experience of catastrophic natural events. Although all members of the same community, Strathewen?s survivors lived through Black Saturday and its aftermath in ways that were often very different from each other. Beginning each chapter with an object from the bushfires ? among them a Trewhella jack, a burned mobile phone, a knitted chook and a brick chimney ? Fraser explores and reveals how each person?s identity, including as a man or a woman with a particular social position in the town, impacted upon experiences and understandings of loss, survival and even the future. This is historical truth of the most vital, affecting and powerful kind.

Melbourne Athenaeum Library
Level 1, 188 Collins St, Melbourne 3000
library@melbourneathenaeum.org.au
Tel:(03) 9650 3100
Powered by Koha   Hosted by