- Title
- Non-Linear Modes of Narrative in the Disruption of Time and Genre in Ambelin Kwaymullina’s 'The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf'
- Creator
- Herb, Annika
- Relation
- M/C Journal Vol. 22, Issue 6
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1607
- Publisher
- Queensland University of Technology Creative Industries Faculty
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2019
- Description
- While Young Adult dystopian texts commonly manipulate expectations of time and space, it is largely in a linear sense—projecting futuristic scenarios, shifting the contemporary reader into a speculative space sometimes only slightly removed from contemporary social, political, or environmental concerns (Booker 3; McDonough and Wagner 157). These concerns are projected into the future, having followed their natural trajectory and come to a dystopian present. Authors write words and worlds of warning in a postapocalyptic landscape, drawing from and confirming established dystopian tropes, and affirming the activist power of teenage protagonists in cultivating change. This article examines the intersections between dystopian Young Adult literature and Indigenous Futurisms, and the possibilities for sharing or encoding Indigenous Knowledge through the disruption or revision of genre, where the act itself become a movement of activism and survival echoed in text. Lynette James acknowledges the “ruptures” (157) Indigenous authors have made in the genre through incorporating Indigenous Knowledge into story as an embedded element – not only of narrative, but of structure. Ambelin Kwaymullina, of the Palyku people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia, exemplifies this approach in her disruption or rupture of the dystopian genre in her embodiment of Indigenous Knowledge in the Young Adult (YA) text The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf. Kwaymullina centres Indigenous Knowledge throughout the trilogy, offering a powerful revision of key tropes of the dystopian YA genre, creating a perspective that privileges Indigenous Knowledge. This is most significantly identified through her depiction of time as a non-linear concept, at once realised narratively, conceptually, and structurally in the text.
- Subject
- indigenous literature; dystopia; indigenous futurisms; time
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1482710
- Identifier
- uon:51006
- Identifier
- ISSN:1441-2616
- Language
- eng
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