Abstract
The Songlines could be defined as the spiritual biography of British writer Bruce Chatwin (1940-1989). In this book he reveals his obsessions and he realizes that it is time to explain the root of his restlessness, that unexplainable urge to flee from home. Published two years before his death, he brings to light the ideas he had been nurturing since childhood. The adventure of two men exploring the virgin territory of Australia reaped enormous critical and public success. He found in the aboriginal creation myth a representation of his concern on nomadism. He wrote about people who create their world in motion. In order to analyze how the author incorporates all these ideas, the first section of the present article examines the origin of his interest in nomadism and Australia. Secondly, it deepens on how the aboriginal philosophy helps him explain his own nomadic urge. Finally, the article considers the chapter titled From the Notebooks, because it constitutes the backbone of his personal philosophy.
References
Clapp, S. (1997). Con Bruce Chatwin. Barcelona: Muchnik Editores.
Chatwin, B. (2002). Qué hago yo aquí. Barcelona: El Aleph.
Chatwin, B. (1988). Los trazos de la canción. Barcelona: Ediciones Península.
Chatwin, J. (2008). Anywhere Out of the World (Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English). Exeter: University of Exeter.
Gnoli, A. (2002). Bruce Chatwin: la nostalgia del espacio. Barcelona: Editorial Seix Barral.
Ignatieff, M. (1987). An Interview with Bruce Chatwin. UK: Granta.
Meanor, P. (1996). Bruce Chatwin. New York: Twayne’s English Authors Series.
Morrison, G. (2012). Songlines 25 years on. Walking and encounter on a postcolonial landscape. Conferencia llevada a cabo en Encounters refereed papers of the 17th annual AAWP conference. Mcquarie University.
Murray, N. (1993). Bruce Chatwin. Mid Glamorgan (Wales): Seren Books.
Nicholls, C. (2019). A Wild Roguery: Bruce Chatwin’s The Songlines Reconsidered. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, 9, 22-49.
Rushdie, S. (1991). Imaginary Homelands. NY: Granta Books.
Shakespeare, N. (1999). Bruce Chatwin. London: Harvill Press.