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Cover image courtesy of publisher.
y separately published work icon Darwin single work   prose  
Issue Details: First known date: 2014... 2014 Darwin
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Darwin is a survivor, you have to give it that. Razed to the ground four times in its short history, it has picked itself up out of the debris to not only rebuild but grow. Darwin has known catastrophes and resurrections; it has endured misconceived projects and birthed visionaries. To know Darwin, to know its soul, you have to listen to it, soak in it, taste it.

'To write about her home town, Tess Lea waded knee-deep in memories of the city, including those of her family and her own. The story begins in 1974, when Cyclone Tracy shattered Darwin, and Lea was a little girl. Then it takes us back to the wild times of early settlement, explores the backstory of the White Australia policy, paints a vivid picture of the bombing of Darwin during World War II – the first Australian city to experience direct attack from a foreign power – and guides us to Australia’s militarised future, led by Darwin, sitting as it does under the largest aerial defence training space in the world. Lyrical and visceral, Tess Lea’s ode to her hometown is suffused with the textures, colours, scents and the many gritty realities that beset this tough, fragile, magical, foolhardy and unique place.' (Publication summary)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Sydney, New South Wales,: NewSouth Publishing , 2014 .
      image of person or book cover 1177853356732933571.jpg
      Cover image courtesy of publisher.
      Extent: 290p.
      Description: illus., maps
      Note/s:
      • Published May 2014
      ISBN: 9781742233864
      Series: y separately published work icon Cities NewSouth Publishing (publisher), Sydney : NewSouth Publishing , 2009- Z1730249 2009 series - publisher prose

Works about this Work

Senses, Ethnography and Spatial Politics : Storying Darwin Tess Lea , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 107-112)
'To review books, as those of us who press this task upon our colleagues well know, is to enact academic generosity, part of the voluntary reciprocity that still sustains universities in these increasingly hard and pressured times. Even if a write-up is unsympathetic, contents still have to be read, and there is little official reward for the gifting of time, wit and wording energy required for crafting a response. To have my recent book on Darwin taken up by the five people of the calibre enlisted here is thus more than humbling: something rare, motivating and invaluable has been honoured in the assembling. That they express things in a way I wish I had — oh, for the chance to plagiarise and rewrite the original! ' (Introduction)
Sound and Contingency in Tess Lea’s Darwin Daniel Fisher , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 100-106)
'Tess Lea's Darwin unfolds as at once autobiography, history, and ethnography, nimbly traversing a series of difficult questions that must face such an ambitious project. How might one account for an abiding Indigenous presence, both historically and as a contemporary force in the Top End, while remaining attuned to other agencies, human and non-human, and their contribution to the shape this city takes? How might that story provide a critical counter-narrative to durable tropes of heroic settlement, colonial nostalgia, romantic primitivism and pastoral largesse? How might one celebrate Darwin's human diversity, its biological diversity, and its beauty and sensory particularity, without papering over the violence, at times wilful ignorance, and racialising force of recent history? And finally, last but I imagine far from least, how do you craft that story for a non-academic audience, opening the topic to critical reflection and taking seriously lessons learned in scholarship, ethnography and conversation? Darwin provides a sharp, riveting, and generative response to these and other questions in a narrative that speaks with audiences and interlocutors who will bring their own expectations and demands to reading. The book succeeds in this, in part, by mobilising and thinking through the senses, through sound, smell, and the lively, vulnerable surface of the skin. It also succeeds, I would argue, because of the manifest care and respect that Lea brings to her topic.'(Introduction)
Darwin, a City on the Edge Lynette Russell , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 97-99)
'Darwin is the final book in the popular NewSouth cities series; previous authors have tended to be creative writers, which for the most part really suits the series' style. While Tess Lea writes with deep personal local knowledge and an enthusiastic fervour and creativity, the book might have enjoyed novelists' flair and insight. Other books in the series are, as intended, true literary non-fiction. Paul Daley's Canberra illustrates the National Capital's utter constructed otherness, its importance and its paradoxical disconnections from the pots. Matthew Condon's offering on Brisbane depicts a metropolis that palpably transforms on the page, shifting from country town to big city with all the pretensions of sophistication and modernity. The production standards for these books are extremely high and quite rightly they have been lauded and applauded for the richness, diversity and simple yam spinning. These are quintessentially Australian books geographically fixed but nationally transformative. Seen together in its entirety this is the series that I would recommend to travellers, and others curious about the land down under and her odd two legged creatures.' (Introduction)
Lines Paul Carter , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 94-96)
'As an immensely readable, well-researched and passionately engaged account of Darwin, Tess Lea's biography of a city might be expected to invite speculation about the challenges of neo-tropical urbanism. Her fine decision to present Darwin's history, people, cultures and environments through a suite of loosely grouped stories demonstrates the proposition that 'Darwin' does not exist as an urban centre with critical or historical mass to generate its own story. It is a con-centration or distribution of suburbs defined by two major edges: the coast and the military landing strip (qua airport). In planning terms, it is a constellation of residential grids and star forms whose essential gravitational pull is expansionist. The recent plan to build a new satellite town up the harbour, irrational on any ordinary principles of town planning, attested to the fact that Darwin remains a pattern of landing strips, sites of temporary arrival and sojourn, always considered preliminary to further flight. The Weddell debacle was not a mysterious offspring of an anti-social spirit of place: as the creation of separated residential developments south of Heavitree Gap in Alice Springs demonstrates, it embodies an institutional incapacity to manage the growth of complexity. Lacking control, the Northern Territory government relishes control: simplification has the double effect of calculability and discouragement.' (Introduction)
Creative Encounters in the Volatile North Sue Luckman , Chris Gibson , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 88-93)
While never residents per se, as long-term repeat visitors and thus 'fans' of Darwin in all its complex diversity it was a pleasure to once again be evocatively trans-ported there, if not literally then vicariously. Tess Lea's Darwin is a wonderful, if unusual book: equal parts local history and scholarly critique, exposé and confessional. On its back cover, the book is categorised as `travel/memoir'. It is those things, but also much more. There are tender touches and moments of quiet reflection, where one can almost feel the sand of Casuarina Beach under one's feet. And there are moments of sheer horror: Aboriginal massacres; children caught in violent cyclones, their bodies tom apart by flying bits of corrugated iron; gang rapes perpetrated on local teenagers by American soldiers. They are all a part of the story of this incredible, challenging locale. Darwin is really an (auto)biography: of a city, its people, its insects and its weather, and of a person with deep feelings and ambivalences for the place. The book has all the contradictions, fraught memories, traumas and emotions that come with the genre of autobiographical account, and that encapsulate Darwin, the city. (Introduction)
Capital Accounts Nicolas Rothwell , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 31 May - 1 June 2014; (p. 16-17)

— Review of Darwin Tess Lea , 2014 single work prose
'The latest literary portrait of an Australian city paints a place of passing dreams, writes Nicolas Rothwell.'
The Living Paradox of the Frontier Town That Survived Tropical Garrison Town a Living Paradox Margaret Smith , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 21-22 June 2014; (p. 30) The Age , 21 June 2014; (p. 30) The Canberra Times , 21 June 2014; (p. 20)

— Review of Darwin Tess Lea , 2014 single work prose
[Untitled] Nadja Fleet , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: The Advertiser , 5 July 2014; (p. 25)

— Review of Darwin Tess Lea , 2014 single work prose
Ode to Darwin Mary Ryllis Clark , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Arena Magazine , August / September no. 137 2015; (p. 49-50)

— Review of Darwin Tess Lea , 2014 single work prose
Darwin [Book Review] Mickey Dewar , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Northern Territory Historical Studies , no. 26 2015; (p. 93-94)

— Review of Darwin Tess Lea , 2014 single work prose
Creative Encounters in the Volatile North Sue Luckman , Chris Gibson , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 88-93)
While never residents per se, as long-term repeat visitors and thus 'fans' of Darwin in all its complex diversity it was a pleasure to once again be evocatively trans-ported there, if not literally then vicariously. Tess Lea's Darwin is a wonderful, if unusual book: equal parts local history and scholarly critique, exposé and confessional. On its back cover, the book is categorised as `travel/memoir'. It is those things, but also much more. There are tender touches and moments of quiet reflection, where one can almost feel the sand of Casuarina Beach under one's feet. And there are moments of sheer horror: Aboriginal massacres; children caught in violent cyclones, their bodies tom apart by flying bits of corrugated iron; gang rapes perpetrated on local teenagers by American soldiers. They are all a part of the story of this incredible, challenging locale. Darwin is really an (auto)biography: of a city, its people, its insects and its weather, and of a person with deep feelings and ambivalences for the place. The book has all the contradictions, fraught memories, traumas and emotions that come with the genre of autobiographical account, and that encapsulate Darwin, the city. (Introduction)
Lines Paul Carter , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 94-96)
'As an immensely readable, well-researched and passionately engaged account of Darwin, Tess Lea's biography of a city might be expected to invite speculation about the challenges of neo-tropical urbanism. Her fine decision to present Darwin's history, people, cultures and environments through a suite of loosely grouped stories demonstrates the proposition that 'Darwin' does not exist as an urban centre with critical or historical mass to generate its own story. It is a con-centration or distribution of suburbs defined by two major edges: the coast and the military landing strip (qua airport). In planning terms, it is a constellation of residential grids and star forms whose essential gravitational pull is expansionist. The recent plan to build a new satellite town up the harbour, irrational on any ordinary principles of town planning, attested to the fact that Darwin remains a pattern of landing strips, sites of temporary arrival and sojourn, always considered preliminary to further flight. The Weddell debacle was not a mysterious offspring of an anti-social spirit of place: as the creation of separated residential developments south of Heavitree Gap in Alice Springs demonstrates, it embodies an institutional incapacity to manage the growth of complexity. Lacking control, the Northern Territory government relishes control: simplification has the double effect of calculability and discouragement.' (Introduction)
Darwin, a City on the Edge Lynette Russell , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 97-99)
'Darwin is the final book in the popular NewSouth cities series; previous authors have tended to be creative writers, which for the most part really suits the series' style. While Tess Lea writes with deep personal local knowledge and an enthusiastic fervour and creativity, the book might have enjoyed novelists' flair and insight. Other books in the series are, as intended, true literary non-fiction. Paul Daley's Canberra illustrates the National Capital's utter constructed otherness, its importance and its paradoxical disconnections from the pots. Matthew Condon's offering on Brisbane depicts a metropolis that palpably transforms on the page, shifting from country town to big city with all the pretensions of sophistication and modernity. The production standards for these books are extremely high and quite rightly they have been lauded and applauded for the richness, diversity and simple yam spinning. These are quintessentially Australian books geographically fixed but nationally transformative. Seen together in its entirety this is the series that I would recommend to travellers, and others curious about the land down under and her odd two legged creatures.' (Introduction)
Sound and Contingency in Tess Lea’s Darwin Daniel Fisher , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 100-106)
'Tess Lea's Darwin unfolds as at once autobiography, history, and ethnography, nimbly traversing a series of difficult questions that must face such an ambitious project. How might one account for an abiding Indigenous presence, both historically and as a contemporary force in the Top End, while remaining attuned to other agencies, human and non-human, and their contribution to the shape this city takes? How might that story provide a critical counter-narrative to durable tropes of heroic settlement, colonial nostalgia, romantic primitivism and pastoral largesse? How might one celebrate Darwin's human diversity, its biological diversity, and its beauty and sensory particularity, without papering over the violence, at times wilful ignorance, and racialising force of recent history? And finally, last but I imagine far from least, how do you craft that story for a non-academic audience, opening the topic to critical reflection and taking seriously lessons learned in scholarship, ethnography and conversation? Darwin provides a sharp, riveting, and generative response to these and other questions in a narrative that speaks with audiences and interlocutors who will bring their own expectations and demands to reading. The book succeeds in this, in part, by mobilising and thinking through the senses, through sound, smell, and the lively, vulnerable surface of the skin. It also succeeds, I would argue, because of the manifest care and respect that Lea brings to her topic.'(Introduction)
Senses, Ethnography and Spatial Politics : Storying Darwin Tess Lea , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 19 no. 1 2016; (p. 107-112)
'To review books, as those of us who press this task upon our colleagues well know, is to enact academic generosity, part of the voluntary reciprocity that still sustains universities in these increasingly hard and pressured times. Even if a write-up is unsympathetic, contents still have to be read, and there is little official reward for the gifting of time, wit and wording energy required for crafting a response. To have my recent book on Darwin taken up by the five people of the calibre enlisted here is thus more than humbling: something rare, motivating and invaluable has been honoured in the assembling. That they express things in a way I wish I had — oh, for the chance to plagiarise and rewrite the original! ' (Introduction)
Last amended 5 Sep 2017 10:43:24
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