On the Road to HokitikaThe Epics of a New Constellation

  1. Suarez Lafuente, Maria Socorro
Revista:
Coolabah

ISSN: 1988-5946

Año de publicación: 2017

Título del ejemplar: Veronica Brady, academic voices and pending hugs

Número: 22

Páginas: 95-103

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1344/CO20182295-103 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso abierto editor

Otras publicaciones en: Coolabah

Resumen

This article aims to analyse Eleanor Catton’s novel The Luminaries mainly using Paul Carter’s theory of spatial history and Catton’s own notions of the influence of astronomy upon human behaviour. The novel portraits a number of individuals who get together in a sparsely populated spot in the South Island of New Zealand and develop a gold-rush town that will eventually become actual Hokitika. Turning a natural space into a "civilized" place requires much toiling and moiling, many personal clashes and the solving of a few mysteries —eventually Hokitika will have its own history grounded and The Luminaries can be concluded in a scene that rounds up the epic construction of the city and promises, at the same time, a consistent future.