Orpheus in Pieces

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26686/jnzs.iNS32.6868

Abstract

On 7 February 1863, the Royal Navy corvette H.M.S. Orpheus, en route from Sydney to Auckland, was wrecked at the entrance of the Manukau Harbour, with the loss of 189 men. This essay offers a “new materialist” retelling of that story, one that seeks to identify the roles played by nonhuman agents of various kinds (such as sand, mud, trees, animals, tides, rain, wind) alongside the roles played by human protagonists (both individual and collective). To help convey the sense of this event as a production by an ensemble cast of actors, I have used the form of creative narrative nonfiction, while remaining within the documented facts.

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Author Biography

Philip Armstrong, University of Canterbury

Philip Armstrong is a Professor of English at the University of Canterbury. His scholarly publications include books on Shakespeare, on animals in literature, and on human-animal relationships in the culture and history of Aotearoa New Zealand. He has also published a book of poems,Sinking Lessons (Otago University Press 2020), which won the Kathleen Grattan Award in 2019.

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Published

2021-06-30