Shooting The Moon
Shooting The Moon
Shooting The Moon
First Thoughts
What are your initial thoughts on the story? What
themes are present?
2
Overview of Story
In Shooting the Moon by Henry Lawson we have the theme of friendship, identity, struggle, pride, perseverance and connection. Taken from
his While the Billy Boils collection the story is narrated in the first person by an unnamed narrator and after reading the story the reader
realises that Lawson may be exploring the theme of friendship. Despite trying to evade the Landlord. Jack and the Landlord become friends.
As too does Tom become friends with Jack. Despite the fact that Jack cannot recall what Tom’s surname may have been. Even though they
travelled the bush for ten years together. This may be significant as identity may not necessarily be important to Jack. Once a man was good
to him. Generally speaking Jack was good to them. He doesn’t appear to have asked any of his friends about their background. As if it
mattered to him. Rather he accepted a person on face value and was unconcerned about their past. Which may be the point that Lawson is
attempting to make. He may be suggesting that those who made their living as swagmen. Though they might have had a previous undesirable
past. This did not necessarily effect their relationship with another swagman. If anything Lawson may be suggesting that everybody regardless
McManus, Dermot. "Shooting the Moon by Henry Lawson." The Sitting Bee. The Sitting Bee, 25 Mar. 2019. Web.
3
Background
4
What should you be looking at
● Look at how Lawson created people out of words - Describe the characters and
support this description with quotes.
● What ideas were ‘behind’ that creation?
● How does the text inform or influence our individual and collective identity?
● How does it affirm, ignore, challenge, reveal and disrupt what you believe
about yourself as an Australian or about groups in Australian society?
5
First Person Perspective
fringed by mulga. Both men smoke tobacco unsuccessful ‘moonlight flit’ from a pub where he not only
befriends another ‘bushie’ Tom, but they are also ironically
and relax after a long day on the track. forgiven and helped by a benign publican.
6
“
Highlight the words in the story that is uniquely
Australian. Highlight words that you do not know the
meaning of and find the definitions. (Hint: on the
website)
7
A FAMILIAR LANDSCAPE?
8
Jack Mitchell
Protagonist, Jack Mitchell also appears in ‘Our Pipes,’ another
short story set for study in Standard English Module A:
‘Language, Identity and Culture.’
· Self-assertive
· Diplomatic
9
Read Into English The Swagman and Australian Culture Handout
10
The Swagman
11
For Russel Ward (1966, p. 3), who in the 1950s published The Australian Legend, an influential study on the origins of Australian identity, the
itinerant seasonal workers who wandered back and forth outback villages, rural properties and coastal towns had an important role in
mythicising the figure of the bushman. These workers’ semi-nomadic lifestyle contributed to the spreading of stories, “yarns”, bush ballads and
popular poetry in which bushmen appeared as protagonists and heroes. In the “Australian tradition”, the bushman was tenacious, adaptable and
skilled at facing the huge distances, dryness and loneliness of the Australian back lands. He was, thus, deemed superior to urban dwellers, becoming
a symbol of Australianness, even though historically Australia has always been an urban society, with most of its population clustering around a few
big cities, all located on the coast. Gregariousness was an important factor for bush travellers and rural workers in 19th century Australia, as
journeying the outback unaccompanied or being left alone on isolated farms for a long period of time might pose a threat to one’s physical health
and mental sanity. One way of avoiding those perils was forming “a bond between equal partners” (The Australian National Dictionary apud
MOORE, 2008, xv, p. 104), or a “mode of pure masculine camaraderie” (GOODALL, 1995, p.88) known as “mateship”. Lawson’s “A Love Story”
shows one of the most sentimental aspects of mateship in action: bush workers sharing a story (or “spinning a yarn” in Australian colloquial
language) around a campfire. The ability to share is one of the main tenets of mateship. Ward’s definition of a mate was someone with whom a man
could share “money, goods, and even secret aspirations and for whom even when in the wrong, he was prepared to make
12
Smoking
13
Creative Activity
● Through dialogue, write the conversation between Tom and the other man
who slandered the publican. You should use appropriate register, including
colloquialisms from the original text of “Shooting the Moon” to recreate
Henry Lawson’s distinctive use of language.
14