University of Tasmania Alumni Issue 52, 2021

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alumni M A G A Z I N E

ALUMNI STORIES – LITERARY AWARDS

| ISSUE 52 | 2021

Life is a labyrinth, but you get there in the end Amanda Lohrey, winner of the 2021 Miles Franklin Literary Award, on labyrinths and the value of the humanities.

“A study of our literature is a study of who we are.” Amanda Lohrey Not one but two University of Tasmania alumni – Amanda Lohrey (BA Hons 1968) and Robbie Arnott (BA/BBus 2012) – made it onto this year’s Miles Franklin shortlist. It was an even greater cause for celebration for the University that Amanda won the much-coveted literary award. “That was very special,” Amanda said. “Because of her, Miles Franklin, because of who she was. She was such an amazing character, a wonderful woman. Fearless.” Winning The Miles Franklin Award is a dream for many Australian novelists, and it is arguably the literary award that is best known among the public. “It’s like the Brownlow Medal, it’s the one people know,” Amanda said from her home in North-East Tasmania. “It has been around for a long time, and it has the name of a person attached to it. Many know who Miles Franklin was and have seen My Brilliant Career (the film based on the book of her life).” Amanda won the award for her seventh novel, The Labyrinth (Text), and is the second Tasmanian to receive the award in its 64-year history, after two-time winner and alumnus, the late Christopher Koch (BA Hons 1954). The novel was praised by the judges as “a beautifully written reflection on the conflicts between parents and children, men and women, and the value and purpose

Amanda Lohrey. Photo: Richard Bugg

Amanda, who also won the Patrick White Award for literature in 2021, reflects fondly on her time at the University of Tasmania and her Arts degree. “When I was at UTAS, the professors and heads of department in the humanities taught first-year

of creative work”.

undergraduates,” she said.

The novel focuses on a woman, Erica Marsden, who

Amanda is a strong advocate for the humanities at

moves to a small town on the south coast of New

universities, and in particular Australian literature.

South Wales to be close to her son, who is in prison.

“A study of our national literature is a study of who

When there, she sets about building a labyrinth, which

we are. It’s not about being literary or highbrow. It’s

becomes a community project.

about our identity as a nation, how it has formed and

“I got interested in the revival of building labyrinths

the stories we’ve told each other and how they have

around the world,” Amanda said. “They’ve been built

changed over time.”

in churches, public gardens, schools, farms. I thought,

Novels are a co-creation between writer and reader,

what is going on here? What’s the appeal of this?”

according to Amanda, with readers bringing a great deal

Amanda thinks it might be an aspect of the mindfulness

of themselves to their reading. Some have commented

movement and the growth of unorthodox forms of spiritual practice. The labyrinth is an archetype found in

that The Labyrinth is about making things, an idea she expands on: “Art is intrinsically therapeutic, anything

cultures around the world with some dating back 5000

from crochet to landscape.”

years. “There are labyrinths on the walls of Neolithic

And returning to the theme of labyrinths, the labyrinth

caves,” she said.

in Amanda’s award-winning novel is poignantly

“It’s like a pattern embedded in our DNA.”

left unfinished.

Amanda describes a labyrinth as ‘a meandering path’.

“No work of art is ever finished,” she said. “A labyrinth is

“You double back on yourself, but you get there in the

like any work of art; it’s a living project, like life itself.”

end. You’re secure in a labyrinth, you can let go, you don’t have to puzzle your way out of it. It’s not a maze.”

Katherine Johnson

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Articles inside

‘The Tissue Detective’ on making a difference

4min
pages 32-33

Still staring at the night sky

3min
pages 30-31

Drivers of positive change

4min
pages 36-37

Jack jumps into dream job

2min
page 38

Forests of the future

3min
pages 34-35

Memoriam

2min
pages 39-40

Life is a labyrinth, but you get there in the end

3min
page 29

Smiles galore as graduation celebrations return

1min
pages 26-28

Riding a wave of confidence

2min
page 17

Award-winning architects

4min
pages 22-24

Breaking down the barriers

1min
page 16

A focus on the bizarre and beautiful

2min
pages 20-21

Standing strong

2min
pages 18-19

Safe skies for all

2min
page 25

Farming down the line

3min
pages 14-15

Michael Field

2min
page 13

Acknowledging Tasmanian Aboriginal culture in our public spaces

4min
pages 3-5

Welcome

3min
page 6

Creating opportunities for connection

3min
page 7

Alison Watkins Q&A

3min
page 8

Blazing a trail

2min
page 9

A beacon of learning and hope for the Cradle Coast

2min
pages 10-11

Honorary Doctorate – Hannah Gadsby

3min
page 12
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