Truganinni

Truganinni by Bill Reed, published by Amazon Digital Services LLC – KDP Print US in May 2015, is a collection of three plays that explore the life and experiences of Truganinni, often regarded as the last Tasmanian Aborigine. This edition, comprising 118 pages, delves into themes of fear, violence, and racial prejudice, reflecting the historical context of Truganinni’s life during the decimation of her people. The plays illustrate her struggles and resilience in a society marked by brutality and discrimination, ultimately portraying her as a significant figure in Hobart’s history.
Readers will find that the three plays present varied theatrical styles, including mime, farce-melodrama, and tragedy, each offering unique perspectives on Truganinni’s experiences. The works not only highlight the cultural and regional aspects of her story but also serve as a dynamic resource for drama courses. Through these narratives, the collection sheds light on the harsh realities faced by the Tasmanian original people, while also celebrating Truganinni’s enduring legacy and her complex relationship with the colonial society that surrounded her.
Official synopsis Publisher
‘Don’t let them cut me up! Bury me behind the mountains!’Fear, violence and race prejudice are themes with which we are all sadly familiar. Bill Reed’s three plays-on-a-theme, based on the life and times of Truganinni — the supposed last Tasmanian Aborigine and, at the end, so socially visible — develop these themes based on the dispossession and final degradation of the Tasmanian original people. In her own lifetime, Truganinni lived through the devastating years of her people’s decimation and virtually sealed off her own bat the last chapter of the massacre of a unique race of people. She witnessed horrific personal and family-clan tragedy and the raw-boned racial society of the time… the killing diseases, the outright butcheries, the set-squares of despise that literally made her people prefer dying to living under the White colony. Yet Truganinni survived to become one of Hobart’s most recognisable and colourful characters. She came to enjoy her ‘Queen-Victorian’ walks through the town’s streets as much as her daily pot of ale. She was thought to be the last of her race after the reputed last male William Lanne, or King Billy, died an alcoholic and had his body mutilated in the name of science. It was little wonder she had such dread of dying and pleaded not to be carved up as he had been. For a time her well-wishers kept the promise to keep her remains safe, but within a few decades her body was officially removed from a secret grave and displayed in the Hobart Museum as a specimen alongside the skeletons of ‘scientifically-interesting’ animals. It was more than 125 years after her death in 1876 that her ashes were scattered on the waters of her beloved Derwent. These three plays offer very different theatrical possibilities: the first is a mime against a background of rhythmic verse; the second is a farce-melodrama; and the third is a tragedy. Either presented singularly or as a whole, they provide, among other things, an excellent vehicle for a varied and dynamic course in drama.
Publisher
Topics
FAQ
What is “Truganinni” about?
Who is the author of “Truganinni”?
When was “Truganinni” published?
What is the ISBN for “Truganinni”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
