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Carregando... To become a whalede Ben Hobson
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This novel tells the story of 13-year-old Sam Keogh, whose mother has died. Sam has to learn how to live with his silent, hitherto absent father, who decides to make a man out of his son by taking him to work at Tangalooma, then the largest whaling station in the southern hemisphere. What follows is the devastatingly beautiful story of a gentle boy trying to make sense of the terrible reality of whaling and the cruelty and alienation of his new world, the world of men. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)823.9Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern PeriodAvaliaçãoMédia:
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Now that I've read Hobson's novel, I can see the link between his interest in Stoner and To Become a Whale. For some time now Australia has been having a national conversation about the status and safety of women, and that issue appears to have been influential in the change of government that took place last weekend. (#HappyDance!) Hobson is clearly interested in interrogating how masculinity can be expressed and his novel uses a conflicted relationship between a boy and his father to explore it.
13-year-old Sam Keogh's mother has just died, and his entire world collapses. Prior to this, his father Walter was mostly absent, away at work for long months of the year. Sam grew up under his mother's care to be sensitive, compassionate, gentle to animals, interested in music and not keen on the sports that intrude into his life when dad comes home. Dad has a different set of expectations and a hyper-masculine ambition for his son. To make this point, Hobson has set his story in the most extreme location imaginable...
The novel is set in 1961, with flashbacks to Sam's childhood while his mother was alive, and the reason for this time frame becomes clear when the funeral is over and the boy and his father set off on a road trip. Australia was still a whaling nation in the 1960s and dad intends to make a 'man out of his son' by taking him to work at the Tangalooma whaling station on Moreton Island. For most Australians, whaling is the most abhorrent industry there is for two reasons: firstly because there is no humane way to kill a whale, and secondly because some species were hunted almost to extinction and are still endangered today.
Sam, who knows little about his father except that he has a savage temper and is cruel to a vulnerable small puppy, is cast into an heroic quest for survival. They are all alone on remote roads, camping in a crude makeshift shack that Sam has to help build with shoddy materials. His father's orders are curt, and often inadequate so that the boy doesn't understand what he is supposed to do. For him, navigating a path to the masculinity his father has chosen for him, means keeping under the radar and behaving with more maturity than the man. For a bereaved boy of thirteen, this is extremely difficult but he is a prisoner of his father's alienation and cruelty.
Evidenced by his behaviour towards Sam's dog, Walter has a transactional view of training and discipline. Children are like dogs, he thinks. Their reason for existence is to be useful in the work that they do, and satisfaction comes from the respect of others less powerful. Love, affection, touch and conversation make one weak and vulnerable. Communication is for barking orders, accompanied by brute force if necessary. Kids need to be toughened up, and Walter is the man to toughen up Sam.
Things get worse when they reach Tangalooma.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2022/05/23/to-become-a-whale-by-ben-hobson/ ( )