Clunes Booktown Festival 2017 Program | Page 16

PANEL DISCUSSIONS PANEL DISCUSSIONS IT’S BLACK AND WHITE Saturday 6 May Time: 1pm-2pm WOMEN WRITING WOMEN Saturday 6 May Time: 4pm-5pm CLUNES BUSINESSES THE FUTURE OF THE FUTURE Sunday 7 May Time: 10am-11am MASCULINE LANDSCAPES Sunday 7 May Time: 2:30pm-3:30pm Speakers: Kate Grenville, Jane Harrison and Rebe Taylor Speakers: Hannah Kent, Clementine Ford, Melissa Keil and Jane Harrison Speakers: Melissa Keil, Mark Smith and Jane Harrison Speakers: AS Patric, Mark Smith and Jock Serong Host: Aunty Marjorie Pickford and Sara Weuffen Host: The Wheeler Centre’s Gemma Rayner WIDOW TWANKEY’S 48-50 Fraser Street Cafe, Lolly Shop and Ice Cream Parlour Open 7 days Host: Angela Crocombe, Kids Shop Manager, Readings Host: Professor Andrew Reeves How can anyone write authentic indigenous-white relationships? This is a story of encounter that needs to be told, but how? Who can do it? By talking to three writers who have brilliantly and effectively navigated this territory in their work, we ca n begin to grasp the complexity of this challenge. But beyond that, what is the power of writing these stories in shaping people’s understanding and progressing one of our fundamental national dialogues. ‘A word after a word after a word is power,’ wrote the feminist author Margaret Atwood. Bell Hooks wrote that 'what we cannot imagine cannot come into being.' If we cannot imagine our past, then our future cannot be properly formed; and if we cannot imagine a better future, we will remain stuck in an old conversation. Come along, listen and participate in this gripping exchange of ideas. 16 CLUNES BOOKTOWN FESTIVAL 2017 What is the power of putting a woman front and centre in a story? And is it still a subversive act? In this broad discussion at Clunes Booktown Festival we’ll hear from women who write about women: Burial Rites author Hannah Kent, Fight Like a Girl author Clementine Ford, Becoming Kirrali Lewis author Jane Harrison and The Incredible Adventures of Cinnamon Girl author Melissa Keil. With experience writing across a range of forms and genres – from opinion columns to fantasy YA novels to feminist manifesto to historical fiction – these three writers will discuss their priorities, predicaments and even anxieties when placing women at the centre of their narratives. What are the unique responsibilities of describing female experiences? Tim Hayes and Michael Waugh 5345 3426 www.widowtwankeys.com.au THE UNION BANK ARTS CENTRE - FOR SALE 20 Fraser Street Accommodation, gallery and workshop spaces available in historic building. Erected in 1865 as a branch of the Union Bank of Australia, it was possibly designed by Leonard Terry. In 1869 the dwelling was added. The building is substantially intact and with its modern extension has been converted for use as an art studio facility and accommodation. Enquiries to: AAG Real Estate 5345 3533 What is the future of YA literature? And how is YA literature actively writing our cultural future by speaking directly to the emerging adults of the next generation? Drawing on a brilliant line-up of writers, this panel explores the changing narratives, characters, setting and concerns that now populate contemporary YA. Melissa Keil, Mark Smith and Jane Harrison represent a diversity of voices and styles. Chaired by Manager of Readings Kids Bookstore, YA expert and bibliotherapist Angela Crocombe, come along to find out where YA literature is heading, and where it’s taking us. In Australia, boys have been known to be boys in backyards, at beaches, trapping rabbits, surfing waves or being slowly boxed into bleached-concrete urban and suburban landscapes. With emotional walls as wide as the front nature strips, males have been silent and grunty on the outside while full of stark, poetic passion on the inside. With three extraordinary male voices in AS Patric, Mark Smith and Jock Serong, this panel sets out to explore the various landscapes of masculinity present in their work and in our culture, hoping to find some fresh insight into a very old question: Can a man still be a man without having blood on his hands?' HISTORIC BUILDINGS TOWN HALL Designed by the architect Percy Oakden, the building was opened in 1873 by the Governor Sir George Bowen. Later in the 1870s, the Supper Room, previously known as the Bible Christian Church, was relocated from Fraser Street. This building is one of the most significant town halls in Victoria, and is used extensively by the Clunes community. RSL The ES&A Bank is an excellent surviving colonial bank designed by Melbourne architect, Leonard Terry (1825-1884). Completed in 1871, the building is typical of Terry’s conservative Renaissance Revival style. The ES&A Bank is one of three banks in Fraser Street, together, they form a landmark precinct, built at the peak of Clunes prosperity. The property was used as a private residence at the closure of the bank in the 1930s and purchased in 1954 by the Clunes sub-branch of the Returned & Services League. AAG REAL ESTATE OFFICE Built in 1870 by Thomas Jones, the building has seen many tenants since Joseph Oldham ran a hairdressing salon. WWW.CLUNESBOOKTOWN.COM.AU 17