Romulus My Father

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AOS – Romulus My Father

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Transcript of Romulus My Father

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AOS – Romulus My Father

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AOS Concepts

How Gaita’s choice of language, imagery and the relational autobiography genre convey meaning about the concept of belonging and shape your response. How his choices have been influenced by his strong sense of belonging to his father, his alienation from his mother his coming to terms with his relationships and his sense of self. How Gaita represents belonging through his representations of people, their relationships, ideas, the landscape, events, and society’s response. How his assumptions about belonging have influenced his representation.

Representation

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AOS Concepts How the individuals’ perceptions of belonging or not belonging in the autobiography can vary and are shaped by his or her personal, cultural, historical and social context. How you perceive the world through Romulus My Father and related texts.

Perceptions

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Perception refers to the interplay of recognition and interpretation and is influenced by our preconceived ideas, memories, experiences and senses. It can alter and even distort how we view the notion of belonging.

AOS Concepts

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How Gaita’s and your perspectives are shaped by personal, cultural, historical and social contexts

Child of migrants Mental illness A difficult and fraught

childhood Professor of Moral

Philosophy

AOS Concepts Contextualisation

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AOS Concepts How Gaita’s and your

perspectives are shaped by personal, cultural, historical and social contexts

Child of migrants Mental illness A difficult and fraught

childhood Professor of Moral

Philosophy

Contextualisation

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The connections between texts through the concept of belonging Compare and

contrast Connect through

the thesis or line of argument

AOS Concepts Interrelationships

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Aspects of Belonging

The potential of the individual to enrich or challenge a community or group: Christine, Lydia, Hora

Represent choices not to belong, or barriers which prevent belonging: Mental illness, attitudes, values

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Aspects of Belonging

The way attitudes to belonging are modified over time

Romulus becomes more detached and isolated after his experiences with women

Christine realises what she has lost

Gaita detaches from his mother

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Student Response

The possibilities presented by a sense of belonging to, or exclusion from the text and the world it represents.

May be influenced by the different ways perspectives are given voice in or are absent from a text – Christine?

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HSC Examination Rubrics In your answer you will be assessed on how

well you: • demonstrate understanding of the concept

of belonging in the context of your study • analyse, explain and assess the ways

belonging is represented in a variety of texts • organise, develop and express ideas using

language appropriate to audience, purpose and context

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Form Relational

autobiography using the outward-turning form of the memoir to focus on the author's parents, and in particular on the figure of his father

‘I thought of it as a tragic poem.’

Spare, stripped-down prose

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Barriers which prevent belonging

The Australian landscape is an evocative metaphor for belonging, identity and alienation

‘Although the landscape is one of rare beauty, to a European or English eye it seems desolate, and even after more than forty years my father could not become reconciled to it.’

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Barriers which prevent belonging

“when she was two hundred metres or so from the house, alone, small, frail, walking with an uncertain gait and distracted air. In that vast landscape with only crude wire fences and a rough track to mark a human impression on it she appeared forsaken.” “For the first time in my life I was really alive to beauty...”

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Displacement Europe and the migrants

are in dislocation. They are physically and mentally imprisoned in this remote, foreign land and the Australian landscape conflicts with their European sensibility

‘Those were the days before multiculturalism — immigrants were tolerated, but seldom accorded the respect they deserved.’

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Alienation The Migrant Experience: - Labour camps, split families, an alien way of life, trying to fit in - prejudice and racism - language barriers - “As soon as my father arrived at the camp…he asked….whether there were any other Romanians.”

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Alienation ‘A troubled, intense,

passionate and cultured city girl from Central Europe, she showed form the beginning signs of a psychological illness that would prove tragic. It was foolish for my father and me to hope that she could settle in a derelict farmhouse in a harsh landscape that aggravated her torment.’

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Relationships The significance of

relationships in shaping our view of world, others and self.

Raymond's “extended family” contribute to his growing up and sense of self and identity

‘Hora...my father's dearest friend and a second father to me.’

“when Hora was at Frogmore he and my father often talked into the early hours of the morning, the kitchen filled with cigarette smoke and the smell of slivovitz”

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Relationships Our values, attitudes,

personality and experiences shape the way we relate to others. ‘I wanted to write, as

Parker says, about the tragedy in the lives of Romulus, Christine, Hora, and Mitru.’

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Romulus’ ‘character’ is already strong like steel at the age of thirteen

He is fearlessly courageous in his defence of principle and has the inflexibility of a moral ‘innocence’ which, in the end, breaks under the shocks of life.

He is driven mad by the failure of human life to meet his exacting demands.

Notions of Identity

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Notions of Identity Christine is artistic, temperamental and sensitive. Gaita’s representation of his mother is distant and limited. ‘It’s true the book doesn’t describe how things looked from my mother's point of view. That is partly because no one knows.’

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Notes from the Marking Centre

Candidates who clearly understood the purpose of their texts were able to demonstrate conceptual understanding and respond personally.

High-range responses used key terms particular to their focus area to create their own thesis, and displayed an ability to evaluate and analyse.

Better responses developed a thesis which demonstrated a strong conceptual understanding of the module and the elective.

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Section III: Extended Response

Must demonstrate understanding of key concepts and ideas of belonging from the rubrics and through your response to the texts

Develop theses or lines of argument

Choose texts that connect with concepts

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Theses or Lines of Arguments We spend our lives trying to belong to self,

a place and others, not realising that it is our perceptions and attitudes that enable us to belong or not belong. When we begin to understand the forces

that drive us to belong we develop empathy for others and personal insight. The relationships we have with self and

others shapes our perception of belonging.

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Section III: Extended Response

The question must drive and shape your response. Your thesis or line of argument must be developed

and sustained. Integrate your discussion of the ideas and the textual

features and details of your texts using your thesis to shape the analysis.

Select texts of own choosing that connect and contrast with how the concept of belonging has been explored and represented.

Your personal response to how belonging is represented and how your way of thinking has been challenged is valued!

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When your cultural identity is marginalised you can feel dislocated and displaced, and believe that you do not belong to your culture or

the dominant culture.

A migrant in a new land can be isolated by language, culture

and absence of friends and family.

Gaita’s father in Romulus My Father is isolated initially by the

slow acceptance of migrants in Australia in the1950s and by the mental illness of his

wife, but through work and friendship he finds

his place.

Many indigenous people are caught between the two worlds: the world of their

ancestors and the world of the colonisers, and belong to

neither. Singer and poet Archie Roach acknowledges this conflict, but he is a powerful advocate for the Aboriginal culture and the need to respect and embrace that culture. As we grew up we felt alone Cause we were acting white Yet feeling black ‘Took the Children Away’ – Archie Roach

The western culture is so powerful and pervasive that many young people

reject their cultural identity believing that this is the

only way that they can ever belong.

Botj in Johnson’s film Yolngu Boy rejects his

Yolngu culture believing that it is the old way; however, he loses his

dignity, self-respect and eventually his life.

Furthering a Thesis or Line of Argument

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Picture Books: The Red Tree, Way Home, Tales from Outer Suburbia, The Arrival, My Place, The Island Graphic Novels: -American Born Chinese (Yang) - Jin Wang, a lonely Asian American middle school student who would do anything to fit in with his white classmates - Sacco’s Palestine - One Night The Moon - Winton’s The Turning

Texts of Own Choosing