Returning to Nothing
Feelings about lost or destroyed places rouse our deepest emotions. Losing a home or a suburb or leaving a homeland can be like losing a loved one. This book examines what it means to lose a place forever and why we return, and keep on returning, to these places so large in our memories. It considers many lost towns, suburbs, and homes: Darwin after Cyclone Tracy, the flooding of the town of Adaminaby in New South Wales, the inundation of Lake Pedder in Tasmania, bushfire at Macedon in Victoria, migration from other countries, the clearing of neighbourhoods for freeways and the everyday circumstances which force people from their land. Peter Read establishes how important the places we live in are, and how much we grieve when we lose them. It tells a human story, which is disturbing, poetic, and often inspiring. Everyone who has lost a place of importance to them will find it unforgettable.
- Based on in-depth interviews conducted by one of Australia's leading oral historians
- Every one of these places has been visited by the author with the person who lived there and both tell powerful and moving stories
- Evocative, well-written book in literary style
Product details
January 1998Paperback
9780521576994
256 pages
229 × 152 × 15 mm
0.38kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Losing Windermere station
- 2. Vanished homelands
- 3. Namadgi: sharing the high country
- 4. Two dead towns
- 5. Home: the heart of the matter
- 6. Empty spaces: the inundation of Lake Pedder
- 7. Darwin rebuilt
- 8. Losing a neighbourhood
- 9. That place.