My special event for September was the Historical Novel
Society of Australasia’s conference. Every two years it happens and every two
years it’s very special. I had to skip the evening events, because my life is
just a bit fast-paced right now. Over coffee the following mornings I found
out how splendid they were. The round table was particularly good, I heard, with
people talking about diaspora and change. This set much of the conference up
for how fiction and how history fed into the society we know. They’re not
independent from our lives.
Opening ceremony, HNSA, Photo courtesy HNSA |
During my first masterclass, this approach came up a lot. We talked
about silencing and about what responsibilities writers had and how to be
ethical and still write the amazing fiction one dreams of. I seem to be
teaching this a lot recently, which is good.
It wasn’t just my masterclasses. It was most of the panels I
attended, and it was one of the academic sessions, and it was one of the
subjects that many people chatted about during breaks and over drinks in the
evening. Being a fiction writer has cultural consequences and so many writers
are saying “I can write my best work and still be aware of those consequences.”
This is one of the reasons I respect writers so very much. Not all writers.
Some are still shuttered in a closed world. But so many of the ones I’m working
with admit that fiction is an active part of creating culture and that we all
have a part to play in the way the world works.
Over the weekend there was a lot of attention paid to developing
good writing. Some people donned mail and helmets. Some checked out costume
(and Rachel Nightingale wore one of the costumes, for she was the one doing the
teaching). There were craft workshops and subject-matter workshops, and
manuscript assessments. I brought in some of my teaching objects and we used
them in my masterclasses and even in one panel.
I delivered a paper, photo courtesy HNSA |
Linking up the physical world with story is a complex
business and it was fascinating to see how different writers reacted to
different objects. A group of audience members for that panel were romance
writers. When we sat round after the conference had finished and they
said “We would’ve reacted differently.” I brought the items out again, and we
explored them from a new angle and it was fascinating to see how each writer
had perfectly useful approaches to transmuting an object into a part of a story:
all of them were valid. For one writer a potsherd wasn’t useful at all, and for
another it became a whole story.
What was really interesting was the number of non-writers
attending panels that I’d mentally assumed were mainly for writers. Someone asked
a question of my panel from the audience and prefaced it with “As a reader…” Australian readers love finding out how writers think and what techniques writers can use.
Discovering history over food, photo courtesy HNSA |
We’re living in a difficult historical moment. This kind of
thought and questioning give me hope. This conference was very good for my
sense of what the future might be if everyone keeps the levels of inquiry and
questioning this high. What’s particularly important to me is that novelists
and their readers (both!) are taking on this understanding that history is not
static. That we interpret the past all the time. That not all interpretations
are equally safe for all of us. The interpretation we each choose matters.
This is where organisations like the HNSA make a difference.
They’re publishing most of the academic papers in November
or December, by the way, so you’ll be able to explore some of the topics for
yourselves. All the best of the discussion was ad hoc, so my recommendation is that you have a dinner party. I would say that, for I’m back into
historical food. Pity my friends…
2 comments:
A great little con, eh? I really enjoyed it and wish it was held every year! Congrats on all your appearances: good work! And wasn't the armory session amazing?
"Being a fiction writer has cultural consequences" - this puts it so well! Thank you!
Post a Comment