![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() At the same time she makes agonisingly clear the unhealed wounds of Australian culture, in writing that demands these wounds be addressed. Too Much Lip: A Novel by Melissa Lucashenko 3.0 Paperback 17.99 Hardcover 27.99 Paperback 17.99 eBook 14.99 Audiobook 0.00 Audio CD 39. In her fictions and public life she makes visible the vibrancy and resilience of Aboriginal communities and their continued connection to land and culture. You remember that”, but like Kerry, Lucashenko refuses to be silenced. Kerry’s Pop says to her: “We livin’ in the whiteman’s world now. Lucashenko’s work is a powerful response to the entrenched racism that still shapes Australian culture to the public and official turning away from the brutalities and genocide on which this nation was built, or the violence and inequities that characterise contemporary society. Too Much Lip is a performance of truth told slant, the actuality of life and of embodied history wrapped within a work of fiction that comes alive in the characters and events that fill its pages thrumming with life.īut it is more than a story. This novel seems to respond to Emily Dickinson’s famous axiom about creative writing: Tell all the truth, but tell it slant. If you stick at it long enough you will eventually discover that you were writing truth where you thought you were writing fiction.” In an interview about Too Much Lip, Lucashenko says: “I discovered that I was writing hidden history without being aware of how close to home I was. ![]()
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