Black Diamonds and Dust
is an historical novel, dealing with a very significant period
in Australian history: from the late eighteenth to the early
nineteenth century, during which time of course the nation
of Australia came into existence and certain features of Australian
culture which came to be thought of as characteristic of the
nation as a whole, were formed. The art of the ‘Heidelberg
school’, for instance, that group who created arguably
the first distinctively Australian depiction of the landscape
and its people, forms part of the backdrop against which the
events of this novel take place.
I have long been of the view that we as Australians
don’t know enough about our own history. ‘History’,
for most of us, sits in our head as the sum total of ‘great
figures’ (usually men), great events (like wars), and
set of official dates and numbers, that happened before we
were born and that we and perhaps our parents can’t
remember. Most of the time, learning about history means learning
such things as how many boats there were in the ‘first
fleet’, when they arrived and who was the fleet’s
leader. Encountering history of this kind, and learning about
history in this way, is an experience on a par with watching
infomercials at four in the morning. It’s not very interesting.
Black Diamonds and Dust
tells a different history. It is a history of ‘ordinary’
working people, a history of the real forebears of most of
us. The novel tells us about the actually conditions in which
people of the Newcastle area in New South Wales, lived (for
people from that area, this is a particularly special book),
it tells us about the kind of people these were – the
work they did, the way they related to each other, the problems
they had, the pleasures they enjoyed and the pain they felt
– and in telling us about these social conditions, and
the beliefs, feelings and psychology of the individuals of
the time, the author has told us something about how history
actually happens, about the process of change. When history
becomes a living story about the process of change, it can
become an experience on a par with listening to your best
friend tell you about their first sexual encounter, with the
school PE teacher, and how this has affected the rest of her
life; that is, interesting.
The characters of this novel – Edmund,
Mary and Clarence Shearer and their family, friends and neighbours
– are products, and to a certain extent victims, of
their environment:
Edward for example works in the Devonside
colliery. He is a hard worker but is frightened of the mine,
and with good reason. Serious accidents are not uncommon,
death is not unheard of. At the beginning of the novel Edmund’s
life revolves almost solely around his work. He eats only
to get energy to work. His entertainment is largely that of
wiping himself out through alcohol. He has no real friends.
He does not speak to his wife. He is a brutal and brutalising
person, a machine for cutting coal. His whole frame of mind
and way of life is determined by the nature of his working
conditions. The author describes a number of times how the
characters live so close to coal that it actually finds it’s
way into their bodies.
So Edmund and the other workers and their
families are victims of these working conditions. But they
also struggle to re-shape those working conditions and the
social environment in which they live. The achievement of
the characters of this novel is to rise above the brutalising
effects of mining work, to turn themselves from extensions
of the mine machine into more whole human beings. They do
this variously through industrial struggle, a determination
to attain education, and an indestructible capacity to love.
Mothers try to find other jobs for their sons, men encourage
each other not to use alcohol as a crutch and to avoid using
violence in the home. A brass band gives the township a form
of entertainment and the workers establish culturally enriching
Mechanics’ Institutes. In spite of broken marriages
and family deaths, people give of themselves emotionally and
become new lovers, brides and bridegrooms, and parents.
As an artistic form, the novel has I think
an unmatched capacity to draw us into a different world and
make us feel the emotions of others. Black Diamonds and Dust
contains great human drama: there is physical conflict, love
and sex both inside and outside of wedlock, there are shouting
matches and subtle innuendo, mine cave-ins and a nature that
both floods and burns. The physical texture of the life of
these characters emerges: what they eat (porridge, roast beef,
dripping, potatoes and pumpkins, onions, radishes, nutmeg,
pastry etc.), and drink (mostly beer), how they clean themselves
(with hot olive oil, to get rid of ear-wax, for your information),
the houses and tents of whitewashed hession they live in,
the flora and fauna around them, from kangaroos and rabbits
to yellow-breasted cockatoos. The vernacular accents and turns
of phrase are all specific to this time and place:
Our own time is not an age when Literature
celebrates heroic struggle – by and large we’re
in the age of the satire – but this novel reminds us
of the heroism of ordinary people.
Over the course of this novel, ‘history’
changes from being that set of official ‘great’
names, dates and events, to becoming a process that our own
parents, grand-parents and great-grandparents took part in
and helped to shape. Through reading Black Diamonds and Dust
we come to recognise our debt to these people, we feel a kinship
with them, we feel a sympathy for them and also an admiration.
Over the course of the novel, for instance, my feelings towards
these people on the front cover changed; by the end of the
book I felt I knew them and somehow I now look at them in
a different way, with both more understanding and more respect.
In our society it is easy to forget where
you came from. Perhaps the overriding message that is fed
to us by the powers that be is that you owe no debt to history,
that you can become whatever you like and attain whatever
you like: we live in a land of opportunity and all you need
to do is work hard, be creative and perhaps have a little
luck. It’s no coincidence that we treat old people the
way we do. How many of us have a real sense of what life was
like for our grandparents? How many of us even know anything
about our great-grandparents?
As human beings we have a longing to know
where we came from, who we really are. And of course the same
people who feed us the bullshit about Australia the land of
opportunity, also take time to fill us in on who we really
are. At the moment, we’re really ANZACs. We may look
like ordinary people who do ordinary jobs and spend a fair
bit of time watching TV, but we’re actually, at heart,
the greatest soldiers the world has ever seen. (It’s
interesting, as an aside, that our reverence for the ANZACs
has increased as the soldiers themselves, in all their flawed
humanity and ordinariness, have disappeared: now they’re
purely mythical creatures of sacrifice and heroism, an endless
resource of mindless jingoistic nationalism.)
The Czech novelist Milan Kundera made an observation
that I have often had cause to reflect upon: ‘The struggle
of people against oppression is the struggle of memory against
forgetting’. In creating this historical novel, Black
Diamonds and Dust, Greg Bogaerts has helped
us to remember who we really are – at least, many of
us will identify with this history and take from the novel
an expanded sense of our identity: we are the children of
extraordinary, ordinary working people. Bogaerts has also
told us who we’re not: we’re not the offspring
of flawless beings of the type who stormed, or attempted to
storm, a certain ridge in Turkey in 1915. The characters of
Black Diamonds and Dust are nothing if not human, and as such
they have the neuroses and occasional psychoses of you and
me.
The author has put us back into history and
put history back into our lives. He has demonstrated that
history is an ongoing process that we’re taking part
in.
This is a significant and laudable achievement;
I congratulate Greg and his far-sighted publisher, and declare
Black Diamonds and Dust well and
truly launched.
Nathan Hollier, 7 May
2005