Rites/Rights/Writes of Passage: Identity Construction in Australian Aboriginal Young Adult Fiction

Jeanine Leane

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    A rite of passage is an experience that triggers a significant transformation. During the journey an individual crosses a border or boundary and is transformed in a way that empowers him or her to live in the world differently than before. A genre in Aboriginal writing that often traces a main character's journey from adolescence to adulthood is young adult fiction. Three prolific Aboriginal young adult fiction writers are John Muk Muk Burke, Melissa Lucashenko, and Tara June Winch. This chapter will look at the bildungsroman in Aboriginal writing through the works of these three authors with particular attention to identity construction, belonging, and the search for a sense of place for the young Aboriginal protagonists in late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century Australia. Though the dominant literary canon in Australia still mainly views identity construction in terms of the Enlightenment concept of the individualist, the Aboriginal bildungsroman focuses on belonging and a sense of place as integral and essential parts of identity construction. Much of the literature that is emerging in the Aboriginal young adult genre centers on cultural as well as individual identity, usually in urban settings where the majority of Australia's Aboriginal population now lives. The characters in Burke's, Lucashenko's, and Winch's narratives demonstrate how contemporary Aboriginal identity is lived in Western contexts, yet this identity still remains distinct from Australian settler culture.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationA companion to Australian Aboriginal literature
    EditorsBelinda Wheeler
    Place of PublicationRochester, New York
    PublisherCamden House
    Pages107-123
    Volume1
    Edition1
    ISBN (Print)9781571135216
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

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