Criena RohanBesprekingen
Auteur van The Delinquents
Besprekingen
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Criena Rohan is a name nearly forgotten in the annals of Australian literature, which is both understandable and rather sad. Rohan (a nom-de-plume for Deirdre Cash) grew up in a down-on-their-luck Irish-Australian family, had two marriages (the first, in the late 1940s, precipitated by a teenage pregnancy) and two children (one from each) before being diagnosed with cancer in her mid-thirties. Rohan managed to churn out two novels - allegedly a third that has never been found - before succumbing to the cancer at age 38. Her "social realist" novels were successful in the 1960s, republished in the 1980s when the other - The Delinquents - was made into a popular film, and appear from time to time in new editions aimed at maintaining her legacy.
Down by the Docks is the story of a young woman from an Irish immigrant family, relocated from Rohan's childhood homes north of the Yarra to Port Melbourne. Strange, as a regular in Port Melbourne these days (where it is gentrification personified), to read about its dark past as the slums, home of immigrants and dock workers and the socially dispossessed. As the heroine, Lisha, grows from girl to young woman, she must confront her family demons, youthful love and often brutal adult relationships, violence, crime, and sorrow. The authorial voice is sly, sensitive, and clear-eyed about the characters, young and old. Her world is one of humour and elan, but mottled by the brutal reality of the lives of the downtrodden. Rohan was, simply, a natural storyteller, and this feels like a quintessential slice of Aussie historical fiction.
Down by the Docks is not a perfect novel, far from it. For one, we are witnessing an author who never made it past her literary infancy. Two novels and gone at 38 is not a recipe for fully-evolved writing. Then there's the reality of the publishing situation: her English publishers must have viewed the book a little anthropologically, and seem to have forgiven some overripe passages and youthful flights of fancy (I sometimes wonder if we do the same when foreign writers - from Ferrante to Garcia Marquez - become briefly fashionable outside of their home language). And there are the excesses of the genre itself. Australian social realism of the post-war period was designed as a rebuke to literature that dealt with the higher-ups (think Martin Boyd) or with literary pretentiousness (Patrick White) or even the very good but deeply sentimental writing of Ruth Park. Instead, the social realists defined themselves by their clear-eyed nature, the vernacular nature of their characters' dialogue, the downward spiral of their self-consciously "ordinary" characters. This was a noble and successful genre but it can tend itself toward sentimentality or, as people would now call it, "poverty porn".
All this having been said, Rohan is a marvellous chronicler of the Australian experience. Take one example (excerpted in the introduction to my edition):
I remember it was a misty morning, misty and still, as though autumn were trying to prolong its time. A soft vapour lay along the top of the Yarra and I knew that later in the day the sunlight would not break through the clouds, it would just filter down in a golden web, wrapping itself around the buildings, throwing a sheen over the trees and putting beauty into the faces of the people that went up and down the streets.
It is impossible to know, when a writer leaves us early, what they could have become. Still, I suspect that the "raw material" found in Rohan's two novels suggests she could have been a national treasure.