Tag: Richard Flanagan

Richard Flanagan: ‘Our politics is a dreadful black comedy’ – press club speech in full | Australia news | The Guardian

Richard Flanagan

I told a friend the other day I was to be speaking here in Canberra today and she told me a joke. A man is doubled over at the front of Parliament House throwing up. A stranger comes up and puts an arm around the vomiting man. I know how you feel, the stranger says.

It’s not a bad joke. But it felt familiar. I went searching my book shelves, and finally found a variation of it in Milan Kundera’s The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, set in communist Czechoslovakia in the dark years after the Prague Spring. In Kundera’s version the two men are standing in Wenceslas Square.

 Richard Flanagan: ‘Our politics is a dreadful black comedy’ – press club speech in full | Australia news | The Guardian

Peter Carey calls government ‘inhumane’

Peter Carey

Acclaimed Australian author Peter Carey says that the Abbott government is ‘inhumane’, becoming the second high-profile writer in a week to criticise Australia’s political leadership.

Award-winning Australian author Peter Carey has accused the Abbott government of being “inhumane” and ruled by big business interests.

Mr Carey, who claims in his new book Amnesia that the CIA conspired to bring down Gough Whitlam’s government, says Australia has become a right-wing “corporation state” that is “terrifying” to live in.

· Extract: Whitlam’s revolutionary first days in power
· Richard Flanagan: ‘I’m ashamed to be Australian’

“We have a situation where the right has come to rule, the corporation has come to rule,” Carey says. “It seems an inhumane regime.”

Speaking to The New Daily, Mr Carey said Australians were experiencing trauma equivalent to that of living through the Cuban Missile Crisis in the 1960s, when “one glimpsed one’s own extinction”.

“Now we live with that, and kids live with that, day after day, after day, after day, after day, and given the failure of governments to act – and given the fact that they’re acting in the interests of corporations continually, the corporations don’t care about the future – I think that’s terrifying.”

Mr Carey made his comments about the current government when asked about former prime minister Gough Whitlam’s legacy and the state of the nation, a day after the former PM passed away.

“Looking back [on Whitlam’s time in power] … it was a time when we had hope and could have hope,” Mr Carey says.

“We just pulled the troops out of Vietnam, the draft resistors were let out of jail. A week and a hundred different things happened and we were proud of ourselves, we were proud of Gough and we were optimistic about our future.”

Amnesia-Peter-CareyThe criticism also comes a week after fellow Booker Prize winner Richard Flanagan said he was “ashamed” to be Australian because of the Abbott government’s climate change stance.

“I’m very saddened because Australia has the most extraordinary environment and I don’t understand why our government seems committed to destroying what we have that’s unique in the world,” Mr Flanagan told the BBC’s Kirsty Wark.

“It doesn’t have to be this way. We can grow our economy but we can do so much for our extraordinary environment.

“There are so many things and, to be frank, I’m ashamed to be Australian when you bring this up.”

Mr Carey’s new novel is both an homage to the audacity of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and what he sees as gross American influence on the downfall of the Whitlam government.

The book centres around a downtrodden journalist, Felix Moore, who, having ruined his relationship with his family and lost his job, takes on the somewhat dubious role of writing about a young, female hacker who has become America’s enemy number one.

The cyber-hacker, Gabrielle ‘Gaby’ Bailleux, a striking blonde, has unleashed a virtual worm that has opened up the doors of Australian and US prisons.

Interweaved into the race to get her story are Moore’s own theories on the CIA’s involvement in the removal of Whitlam.

Mr Carey says the extent of the US-Australian relationship has always worried him and Assange’s emergence as a traitor or savior, depending on your point of view, reignited his passion for the subject.

“The US-Australian thing has long been in my mind,” he says.

“With Assange, it was a sense of amazement and wonder – and some admiration, I must admit – at what he’d done. He’s clearly very complicated.”

So is Mr Carey, it would seem.

Man Booker prize winner Richard Flanagan ‘ashamed to be an Australian’ Novelist says he is saddened by the Australian government’s environmental policies and prime minister Tony Abbott’s statement that ‘coal is good for humanity’

Richard Flanagan wins the Booker prize

Man Booker prize winner Richard Flanagan ‘ashamed to be an Australian’

Novelist says he is saddened by the Australian government’s environmental policies and prime minister Tony Abbott’s statement that ‘coal is good for humanity

Andrew Bolt’s  uniform response

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Notice however the T is on a dummy. He really wants his passport withdrawn

 

The winner of the Man Booker prize, Richard Flanagan says he is “ashamed to be an Australian” because of Australian prime minister Tony Abbott’s environmental policies.

Flanagan has won the prestigious award for his novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North, about prisoners and captors on the Burma railway.

Speaking on the BBC’s Newsnight program after the award ceremony, the Tasmanian author and committed environmentalist was asked about Abbott’s recent comment that “coal is good for humanity”. The prime minister made the comment while opening a coalmine in Queensland on Monday.

“I’m very saddened because Australia has the most extraordinary environment and I don’t understand why our government seems committed to destroying what we have that’s unique in the world,” Flanagan said.

“To be frank, I’m ashamed to be Australian when you bring this up.”

Flanagan was also asked about the repeal of the Tasmanian forestry peace deal between environmentalists and logging companies last month.

“I genuinely believe that people of Australia want to see these beautiful places, these sacred places, preserved, [but] the politics of the day is so foolishly going ahead and seeking to destroy them when there isn’t even an economic base to it, when there is no market for the woodchips that would result from the destruction of these forests,” he replied.

“I think it’s unnecessary and I think it’s just politics being used to divide people that could otherwise be brought together on all that is best and most extraordinary in our country.”