Posts Tagged ‘bushfire’

Seminar – Black Saturday at Steels Creek: initial directions and decisions

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Steels CreekDr Peter Stanley
Centre for Historical Research,
National Museum of Australia

Time: 4.15-5.30pm, Wednesday 31 March 2010

McDonald Room, Menzies Library
Australian National University

On 7 February 2009 bushfires devastated large parts of rural Victoria, eventually killing 173 people and burning over 45 square kilometres of bush and farmland and 2000 buildings. Among the many places affected was the small ‘locality’ of Steels Creek, home to about 200 people living around a valley 10 kilometres north of Yarra Glen and 5 km south-east of Kinglake. Steels Creek lost ten people killed and over 50 dwellings destroyed when the fire roared out of the Kinglake National Park late on the afternoon of Black Saturday.

In the fire’s aftermath leaders of the local community wisely decided that they needed more than help repairing fences. They invited historian Tom Griffiths to consider framing a project involving historians helping to understand what had happened. Tom invited the National Museum to join him and soon enough I became part of a small team (including Tom and film-maker Moira Fahy), the Victorian Bushfire Project.

As a part of this project I am now writing a book, Black Saturday at Steels Creek: Fire and an Australian Community, due to be published by Scribe in 2012, which will trace what happened and reflect on how people experienced this traumatic event. Through this study we might better understand the place and its people, and even larger issues about fire and ‘community’ in modern rural Australia.

In this paper, about six months after starting serious work, I want to discuss how I’m approaching a venture new in subject matter but somewhat familiar in tone and methodology. I’ll discuss the ways I’m approaching this very recent event, and how I’m developing a relationship with those who lived through the fire in order to document and interpret their experience. I look forward to discussing many of the decisions and questions I’m facing.

Dr Peter Stanley is the inaugural Head of the Centre for Historical Research at the National Museum of Australia, where he has worked since 2007. Peter has published over twenty books, mainly in the field of military social history, such as Tarakan: an Australian Tragedy, White Mutiny: British Military Culture in India 1825-75 (based on his 1993 ANU PhD), For Fear of Pain: British Surgery 1790-1850, and in 2009 Men of Mont St Quentin and Commando to Colditz. His next book (to be published in August) will be Bad Characters: Sex, Crime, Mutiny and Murder in the Great War. A common theme linking his books is the idea of people in extreme situations.

Bushfire essay wins award, prize money boosts bushfire research project

Friday, September 4th, 2009
Bushfires

Bushfire-ravaged countryside in Steels Creek, near Kinglake. Photo: Simon Mossman, AAP Image. Source: Inside Story.

Professor Tom Griffiths, whose essay ‘We have still not lived long enough’ won the Alfred Deakin Prize for an Essay Advancing Public Debate at the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, said he will donate the $15,000 prize money to a research project that’s helping communities recovering from the Black Saturday bushfires in Victoria to record their stories.

“It’s important that this prize money go back to help the fire-affected communities,” Griffiths said. “The most appropriate way that I can do this is to donate it to the collaborative community fire history project that we launched at ANU in the immediate aftermath of Black Saturday in partnership with researchers from the National Museum of Australia.

“Recovering communities need not only food, shelter and infrastructure; they also need a sense of identity, continuity and hope – that’s what we’re helping to achieve.”

The collaborative community fire history project is being administered by the ANU Endowment Fund and was seeded by $20,000 in funding from ANU, an amount matched by the David Thomas Foundation.

The essay is an analysis of the Victorian bushfires and the deep ecological and historical patterns that gave rise to the event. It was originally published in Inside Story in February.

Full news story: http://news.anu.edu.au/?p=1592

Judge’s citation

‘We Have Still Not Lived Long Enough’ by Tom Griffiths (published by ‘Inside Story’, February 2009)

Written in the immediate aftermath of the 2009 Victorian fires (first published 16 February), this lucid, elegant essay responds intelligently and with compassion to the tragedy. In economical and engaging prose, Griffiths brings fine scholarship to bear on our human relationship to a very particular physical landscape, while also deftly locating the Victorian fires in their historical, environmental, climatic and geographic context. Ever dispassionate, Griffiths is able to draw clear policy lessons without acrimony or finger pointing. This is the essay all Australians should read if they wish to understand a particular catastrophe, learn about the precedents, and grasp both the particular circumstances of one Australian region and the general environmental responsibilities of all citizens.

For full details, see http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/programs/literary/pla/adprize/shortlist_winner_2009.html

Read the essay at Inside Story: We Have Still Not Lived Long Enough