Discuss the presentation of the spiritual in Tim Wintons novel Cloudstreet.

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LONG ESSAY:

4. “I remember being a young boy totally affected by landscape and apprehending God through that…” says Winton.

Discuss the presentation of the spiritual in Tim Winton’s novel Cloudstreet.

PLAGIARISM DISCLAIMER:

I, Mandy Low declare that the following essay is all my own work and that I have fully acknowledged in my bibliography both print and non-print sources for ideas, vocabulary and information used in my arguments. I recognize that plagiarism is a serious matter which will be treated as cheating and penalized accordingly.

Date: 5th May 2006

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Word count: approximately 1300 (excluding quotes)

Spirituality is presented in Tim Winton’s novel Cloudstreet as a greater force “beyond the mere physical”.  Winton is an Australian author born in 1960. Elements of Cloudstreet have been derived from Winton’s personal life, experiences and beliefs such as his sense of family, his Australian upbringing, and in particular his comprehension of the spiritual realm. When writing his novel, Winton “wanted to include both realms because [he felt] that is true realism: the supernatural and the natural accepted as one thing, as inclusive” because he believes “that everything that lives is holy and somehow integrated”.  The characters of Cloudstreet are thus exposed to a supernatural dimension and their spiritual journeys bring them to “find meaning in the chaos of existence”. Many Christian biblical references are interwoven throughout the novel, however, “rather than ‘religious’, ‘numinous’ is a safer word to use … for though they reflect his personal quest for the highest ideals in life and focus on the spiritual attitude of those who recognize a controlling power, they are not expressed in terms of any conventional religion.” Winton avoids direct association with any particular form of spirituality but instead refers to one which transcends all religions. Winton employs the symbols of the house, the Aboriginal Blackfella and the water to present the landscape from which his characters, particularly the Lambs, are “totally affected” and consequently are brought to “apprehend God” and find their personal understanding and peace.

Cloudstreet is a story which revolves around two families who share a house situated at “Number 1 Cloud Street” (43). The novel traces the journeys of self discovery of central characters. Disastrous circumstances unite the Lambs and Pickles. The Lambs have a catastrophic experience as family member Samson ‘Fish’ Lamb nearly drowns, only to be brought back to a partial existence where “it’s like Fish is stuck somewhere… Like he’s half in and half out” (69). On the other hand, the Pickles endure the loss of father Sam’s fingers in a fishing accident. These physical tragedies trigger explorations of spiritual substance through which characters ponder the meaning of life.

The symbolism of the house in Winton’s Cloudstreet is employed to play a part as an element of the physical and supernatural landscape through which characters are exposed to a higher spiritual realm. The house is a symbol for Colonialisation as it is explained that it was obtained to “make ladies” of Aboriginal girls “so they could set a standard for the rest of their sorry race” (36). The negative connotation of the victimization of aboriginal girls associated with the house leaves the house resonating with spirits of discourse. The house is personified by Winton to represent this spiritual territory. “Oriel wasn’t the type to argue with a living breathing house” (134) and Fish senses that “the house sad” (166). This personification emphasizes “its dynamic nature” and greater dimension of complex spirituality. As the families integrate in the house they are exposed to these spiritual elements. Specific spiritual encounters occur in the library, which is a room which had “no windows” and walls “blotched with shadows” (38). “The walls flicker with a black, gleeful flinching of shade… The shadows press in against themselves all of a sudden and dust motes freeze immobile in the air” (161). The evil described, which resides in darkness, is an allusion to Christianity. Jesus Christ is described in the bible as a light to the world so where there is an absence of God, there evil dwells. The windowless room signifies both families’ rejection of spirituality in their lives. Conflict inhabits the house until the point of Oriel Lamb’s rejection. She “[moves] her things out to the white tent beneath the mulberry tree at Cloudstreet” (133). Disharmony continues until the house is cleansed of its evil and the past spirits are released. This cleansing takes place in the form of Rose and Quick’s love and the birth of Wax Harry. When Rose and Quick make love in the “empty dark library”, they are described as “two points of light sparking up the dark” (313). Eventually, when Wax Harry is born, “the room sighs, the house breathes its first painless breath in half a century” and it is “like the voice of God Himself pouring up… shaking the old smells from the walls and the worry from the paintwork” (385). These acts of love and new birth make reference to the birth and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The death of Jesus parallels to the death of the Aboriginal girl and Christ’s resurrection is linked to the new life of Wax Harry. This cleansing of the house is symbolic of an overall development in characters’ comprehension and acceptance of the existence of a spiritual realm. These events are employed by Winton as catalysts to bring about “a sense of completion and a sense of self”. The spiritual progression of the house is ultimately symbolized as “Quick prizes boards away… and a square of sunlight breaks into the room with a shudder and a riot of motes and spirits. Fish sees the shadows with their mouths wide in horror” (374). The families of Cloudstreet are able to replace the darkness for light both physically and spiritually in their lives. The house is an example of where “the frontiers of present reality and the spirit world emerge”. Winton uses the house to present spirituality in Cloudstreet in that it represents an element of the landscape which triggers the characters’ apprehension of God.          

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The Blackfella is another element linked to the landscape, which Winton employs to symbolically represent spirituality in Cloudstreet. “The Black Man… personifies the identification Aboriginal people have with the land”. The Blackfella appears in the novel in many instances as a symbol of mystical powers from the spiritual realm. His overwhelming presence throughout the events of the novel is explained by Winton who intended for him to represent a figure similar to a guardian angel or savior. This allusion to Christian ideology, where God is depicted as a protector, is enriched by the historical significance of the ‘angel’ being ...

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