Peter Carey’s Challenge to a ‘Christian’ Australia in Oscar and Lucinda

Authors

  • James Dahlstrom University of Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.30897

Keywords:

Australian Identity, Christianity, Church of England, Australian Bicentenary

Abstract

Throughout Australia’s European history, its political leaders have invoked a construction of Australian identity which contends that Australia is ‘a Christian country’: a claim made as recently as November 2014 by Pauline Hanson in her speech to re-launch her One Nation party. Published in 1988, Carey’s novel Oscar and Lucinda was seen by many as his response to Australia’s bicentenary, and it can be read as a challenge to several of the mainstays used in dominant constructions of ideal Australian life, its ‘Christian heritage’ included. In this article, therefore, I will explore the novel’s critique of the Anglican Church more speci?cally, and Christianity more generally, which it employs as a means of challenging the myth of Australia as a Christian nation. This discussion will call upon the work of Pierre Bourdieu and Benedict Anderson, as well as Lyn Spillman and Kate Mitchell who examine commemoration and literature as productions of cultural memory.

Author Biography

  • James Dahlstrom, University of Sydney
    Dr James Dahlstrom has published several articles in the field of Australian Literature and was recently awarded a PhD from the University of Sydney. His thesis concentrates on the early fiction of Peter Carey and examines Carey’s portrayal of Australia’s struggle for identity. He argues that Carey’s early fiction demonstrates the challenge Australians face in constructing a unique identity because of the country’s anticipatory transnational culture and because of the constant and consistent comparisons Australians make between their nation and England and/or America. James also holds a Master’s degree in Australian Literature from the University of Wollongong. In this thesis, he examined a sustained anti-American sentiment in Australian Literature which emerges in his reading of three novels from the Gold Rush, the First and Second World Wars, and the Post 9/11 era. He has moreover earned a Bachelor’s degree in German and completed a teacher preparation course in secondary English education from Arizona State University.

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Published

2017-04-06

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dahlstrom, J. (2017). Peter Carey’s Challenge to a ‘Christian’ Australia in Oscar and Lucinda . Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 29(3), 280-299. https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.30897

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