Sharon Faylene and the woman from the welfare

Heterosexual fulfilment and modernist form in Criena Rohan's 'The Delinquents'

Authors

  • Nicholas Birns New York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2016.29

Keywords:

Criena Rhoan, 'The Delinquents', rebellion and subversion, regional modernism

Abstract

Criena Rohan’s The Delinquents (1962) has always had a cult appeal — in 1989 it was made into a movie, starring Kylie Minogue as Lola and an unknown American as Brownie — and was recently reissued as a Text Classic. A short novel written by a writer who did not have a long career, and published between more commonly scrutinised periods of Australian fiction, The Delinquents is still, however, liminal. The Delinquents is very much a novel of rebellion and subversion, as its teenage protagonists, Brownie Hansen and Lola Lovell, pursue their love over the opposition of both sets of parents the police, the bourgeois consensus and everybody who is not them. By the fiery smoldering of its passion, though, their love sustains them and they emerge at the end, buffeted but united and resilient. This article argues that Rohan’s book represents a Queensland iteration of a ‘regional modernism’.

Author Biography

  • Nicholas Birns, New York University

    Nicholas Birns is the author of Understanding Anthony Powell (University of South Carolina Press, 2004) and the co-editor of A Companion to Australian Literature Since 1900 (Camden House, 2007), which was named a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book of the year for 2008. His book Theory After Theory: An Intellectual History of Literary Theory from 1950 to the Early 21st Century appeared from Broadview in 2010 and is now widely used in classrooms, and his monograph Barbarian Memory: The Legacy of Early Medieval History in Early Modern Literature came out with Palgrave Macmillan in 2013. Contemporary Australian Literature: A World Not Yet Dead, a major overview of contemporary fiction from Down Under, was published by Sydney University Press in 2015, and co-edited projects on teaching Australian and New Zealand Literature and Roberto Bolano as world literature are under contract with the Modern Language Association and Bloomsbury respectively. He has contributed to the New York Times Book Review, The Hollins Critic, Exemplaria, Arizona Quarterly, MLQ and many other journals and edited anthologies. He is the editor of Antipodes: A Global Journal of Australian/NZ Literature.

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Published

2016-12-01

How to Cite

Birns, N. (2016). Sharon Faylene and the woman from the welfare: Heterosexual fulfilment and modernist form in Criena Rohan’s ’The Delinquents’. Queensland Review, 23(2), 196-206. https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2016.29