Wide-eyed and
well-educated. That was me, supposedly.
[The above is something I wrote for a little Open Mic Night we had in Katherine last weekend. The occasion was a visit by the brilliant Omar Musa who was travelling around launching his first novel 'Here Comes The Dogs' (spectacular website, btw).
I decided to try my hand at some writing that's more creative than my usual blogging and thesis writing. Oh, and then stand up in front of 40 or so people and say/perform it. Definitely a first for me, but I enjoyed the exercise.]
That was me when I
first camped in an Aboriginal community. I was there to learn about “the other”. Except now, I was
“the other”. If the community was a billabong that never dried up, I was a fisherman.
Transient. Sitting on the bank, optimistically dangling a line, seeking a gift,
a prize, some sustenance.
But on this day –
the day I got my simplest and most effective Kriol lesson ever, I wasn’t a lone
fisherman. Me, and - “them” - were an
awkward “us”. A handful of people lining a creek, at 100 foot intervals,
semi-hidden from each other, each in our own quiet space and solitude.
Optimistically dangling that line.
Except my line was
tangled and taut with my own anxiety. I was the outsider, observing “the
other” yet being “the other”. How do I act here? How do I speak to these
people? How are they gonna accept me? How do we interact? Can I keep my feet on
the ground, outta my mouth?
I kept fishing,
kept that line in the water, kept my fears tightly wound round the cheap
plastic handreel inside my own self-consciousness. I waited for a bite.
The sun sank.
There we were. A handful of people and a watercourse, whose relationships were bound
by a history older anything I’d ever encountered before.
My fears, I
discovered, were unfounded. I found them willing to fold me into their world,
ever so slowly. Fold me in like an origami artist making deliberate creases on
expensive paper. The sun sank and it was time for a Kriol lesson.
The instruction. ‘Yu
jingat yu banji jeya’ – call out to your newly-adopted brother-in-law over
there.
And no further
meta-discussion, just a demonstration: ‘BANJI! WI GARRA GU NA!’
‘Bunjee. We gotta go now.
‘Nomo lagijat’. –
not like that. ‘BANJI!’, yu la…
‘BANJI!’
‘WI GARRA GU NA!’
‘WI GARRA GU NA!’
And that was my
lesson. It wasn’t hard. It wasn’t long. It wasn’t grammar or vocab. It was
intonation. Prosody. And what us linguists call pragmatics. It was an essential
lesson. A basic lesson: how to speak to someone who is far away.
In my culture, I
was shouting. A sign of anger, distress. In their culture, it was purely
pragmatic. Greater distance = greater volume.
This was a lesson
absorbed very easily, and very permanently. Catch of the day on my day of
fishing.
But that lesson
was 10 years ago. And that riverbank is far away in space and time. Traded in
for town. K-Town. Woolies. Commerce, business, retail. Small talk,
pleasantries, acquaintances. Dinner parties and the detritus of Facebook gossip.
And what they like to call ‘antisocial behaviour’. The us and them
that fosters and festers when shared experiences aren’t experienced.
Why can’t they
behave? Why are they so noisy? Why can’t they be more like us? Why can’t they
keep their voices down? Keep their voice down. They They They. Why Why Why.
The ‘they’ of ‘our’ rhetoric, of our pronominal problem… ‘they’ are just fishermen and fisherwomen. Disrupted by the sinking sun. Needing to move to escape the impending darkness, but no longer sure where to go.
The ‘they’ of ‘our’ rhetoric, of our pronominal problem… ‘they’ are just fishermen and fisherwomen. Disrupted by the sinking sun. Needing to move to escape the impending darkness, but no longer sure where to go.
[The above is something I wrote for a little Open Mic Night we had in Katherine last weekend. The occasion was a visit by the brilliant Omar Musa who was travelling around launching his first novel 'Here Comes The Dogs' (spectacular website, btw).
I decided to try my hand at some writing that's more creative than my usual blogging and thesis writing. Oh, and then stand up in front of 40 or so people and say/perform it. Definitely a first for me, but I enjoyed the exercise.]
Comments
But "Except my line was tangled and taught with my own anxiety": It wasn't taught (who taught it?), it was taut.