Dr
Neil Béchervaise
NB
Consulting (Australasia) Pty Ltd
Re-inventing
learning with rich novels
Lady Dance
Jackie French
Angus & Robertson
Published 2000
Reviewed by Neil Bechervaise
University of Sydney
Every so often I am joyously
reminded of how strongly I believe that all educational experiences
should be linked with each other and with the world we live in.
Questions of relevance tie in with questions of common sense or
meaning-making. Questions from the past link with questions about
the present and future. Fears and hopes are tied together into needs
that can be answered coherently if approached with a little intelligence
and imagination.
In this context it becomes
a delight to follow the development of an author of the calibre
and intellectual range of Australias Jackie French. Since
I first read her parable of continuity with a timeless past, Walking
the Boundaries, I have been "on her side" though
I have not yet become a groupie.
The integration of historical
fact with current understanding of how that fact
is transformed into accepted and emerging cultural wisdom
provides for powerful fiction. The regularity with which French
scoops up literary awards for her fact-ional novels supports the
view that she is striking powerful chords among that group of adult
literati who presume to judge the quality of novels written for
younger readers. More importantly, she is establishing accessible
links with some of the tougher concerns facing the world, and perhaps
Australia in particular, today.
Anguish for runaway children,
justice for war criminals, concern about real parent identity, response
to an enemy in war and to the indigenous issues facing contemporary
society have each been explored in powerful yet various novelistic
forms. Frenchs experimentation with prose evokes film treatment
without ever begging for it in the manner of the similarly powerful
Australia novel by Brian Caswell and film director David An Chiem,
Only the Heart. Her unapologetic use of identifiable
locations and events provide powerful synergies for her readers.
Set in rural England
and evoking recollections of the three field system of agriculture
and the Childrens Crusade, Lady Dance has little
else in common with the Camelot of Arthur and Guinevere. It will
probably find its keenest readership among the girls of years 5
to 7 though it will reward every reader with an interest in medieval
life and death. Life because the novel is a celebration
of survival in unimaginably hard times, "A woman might have
twenty babies, but usually only two or three children lived
the others died." Death because this is a novel
of the bubonic plague in the 1340s when "possibly one person
in three between India and Iceland died in the first two years".
And life because the novel celebrates the ironic survival of a peasant
girl through the dance of a noblewoman with severe bi-polar disorder.
Jackie French drives
in where many authors flinch or fail. A novel about death and disease
with strong elements of medieval Christian teaching and entrenched
class division seems an unlikely winner in the putatively egalitarian
context of the 21st century. But it is equally unlikely anywhere
and at any time as an entertainment for young adults Nevertheless,
it is Frenchs novelist gift and her confidence with characterisation
that lifts her novels beyond common stereotyping. In her increasing
deft hands, Lady Dance becomes more than a novel for
readers growing out of their childhood. It becomes a primer for
survival, an interpretation of what independence really means, of
what grief and sickness really mean, of what friendship actually
costs, and what faith might achieve in the hands of the faithful.
This is not a novel for
the faint-hearted. Rather, it is the basis for a comprehensive discussion
of lifes hard lessons, of AIDS epidemics, of starvation in
the presence of plenty, of incalculable wealth accepted by the intolerably
poor, of scientific ignorance on an international scale. And of
the sublime facility of music and dance to generate a reality that
renders suffering tolerable. Like an increasing number of Jackie
Frenchs works, Lady Dance is a life syllabus waiting
to be learnt. Taken into homes and schools in pursuit of such a
lofty purpose, it will help achieve those goals so often claimed
for literature and so seldom met.
Developing a coherent
life syllabus is not often seen as the role of a school despite
the fact that schooling is claimed to provide each student with
an education. Nevertheless, as I implied at the outset, Jackie Frenchs
Lady Dance reminds me of the potential schools still
hold for providing education.
As a science text, the
novel provides a challenge for its readers: what is an epidemic
and how is it transmitted? For many plagues, as French reminds us
in her useful but sensibly limited "Authors Notes",
we still cannot identify sources, still have limited understanding
of transmission modes, and still have not evolved either treatments
or preventive vaccines. Similarly, we do not have cures for more
common, but equally disturbing, ailments.
The revelation that Lady
Dance suffers an extreme version of bi-polar disorder provides a
mini-climax in the story. Its more common identification in the
author notes as manic depression brings it closer to
the reader. An introduction to the symptoms and history of the condition
as it develops untreated provide the reader with an opportunity
to examine broader health issues and their social and family implications.
At a literary level, of course, the introduction of mental health
focuses our reader minds on the careful research underpinning the
novelists craft.
For the geographer, the
evolution of agricultural practices to maintain productivity levels,
the range of crops, and tilling and cropping procedures support
an exploration of the development of the village as an independent
social and economic unit.
Biologists and domestic
scientists will be rewarded with studies of plant characteristics,
medicinal use of herbs, propogation, nutritional value of plants
and methods of preparing plants as food.
Lady Dance
provides obvious opportunities for inquiring Art educators to apply
their knowledge of materials and processes in medieval architecture,
textiles and costume while Dance and Drama teachers will be similarly
inspired.
Musical knowledge can
be formalised and extended through the introduction of percussion
and pipes while the discussion of formalised musical notations and
instrument construction provide opportunities to discuss the development
of music across the centuries.
While dragons are popular
in literature and play, living with a suspicion that they really
exist is just one of the superstitions that might lead into a powerful
examination of how beliefs shape our social and personal identity.
As French argues, Lady Dance is not intended to represent
a particular religious viewpoint. Rather, it is the acceptance of
religion as a central feature in most civilisations that both informs
the storyline and enhances its richness as an educational source.
The accessibility of the Exultate Deo across the ages provides a
powerful argument for linking any reading of the novel with a discussion
of music in ceremony.
The construction of history
will, of course, become a central issue for every educator working
with the novel. Fictional representations of historical events remind
us of the centrality of narrative to our culture. More importantly
perhaps, they remind us of the need to make sense of events by locating
them within our own understanding. Meaning-making is necessarily
meaning invention. French provides a highly accessible literary
artefact with which to approach the fact that all history is constructed
in the mind of the reader.
On a more traditional
level, Lady Dance provides an insight into the diversity
of peasant life and aspiration in the twelth century. It gives lesser
glimpses into the lives of the aristocracy of that period. The childrens
crusade is introduced and the social impact of crusades on women
is reflected in the role of the nunnery. Ages of marriage and, by
implication, fertility, are introduced and the roles of male and
female in marriage partnership provide considerable scope for research
and discussion. Integrating history, science and religious belief,
the infant mortality rates cited in the "Authors Notes"
provide a strong incentive for discussion of changing patterns of
family life in an increasingly multicultural global community.
Jackie Frenchs
Lady Dance is not a curriculum on its own, nor is it
a textbook. Instead, it provides a strong incentive for educators
to explore the potential for developing integrated syllabus units
around rich and accessible texts. A month of reading, research and
discussion might re-establish the traditional classroom as the centre
for education it has long been assumed to be.
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