Preview

Identity in the Novel Deadly Unna

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
602 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Identity in the Novel Deadly Unna
How does Blacky’s identity change with the death of Dumby Red?

The novel Deadly Unna by Phillip Gwyne, addresses many issues including racism and identity. This book provides the opportunity to look at how friendship can change the way people view themselves and others throughout.
Deadly Unna the main character, Blacky confronts issues such as racism, conformity and identity as part of growing up as a teenager in the port.

Before Blacky became friends with Dumby, he went along with the crowd and conformed to the way the rest of the Port operated. Blacky is portrayed as a boy who doesn’t like to get in peoples way. He has different views about the Aborigines’, than the people in the port, but feels as if he has to conform to the way everyone else thinks to fit in. When Blacky and Dumby meet for the first time he automatically labels him as a ‘Nunga’ and jumps straight to conclusions about him because that is the way he has been brought up. His dad calls him a ‘gutless wonder which doesn’t really help his confidence and courage to stand up for what he believes in. However when Blacky gets to know Dumby, he is drawn to how confident and sure he is of himself. Blacky is jealous at first of how confident Dumby is and his ‘killer smile’.

The people in the port have many racist beliefs toward Aborigines’. Even though Dumby was the best player, Arks still put Mark Arks at the top of the team list. ‘Top of the list was Mark Arks. The next name down was Dumby Red’s.’
Most rumors come from the front pub. They are stories people have of what they think Aboriginals are like (e.g. the point sign full of bullet holes). The Aboriginals get treated unjustly in the community and the only time they are represented is when everyone comes together for the footy matches. When Dumby saves Blacky from the Thumper, Blacky really starts to like Dumby, but he doesn’t show it because he thinks he has to conform to what everyone else thinks ‘So I stopped hating Dumby’s

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    The idea is constantly presented as negative and a destructive tendency, not only in past literature but in modern literature as well. The message surpasses cultural barriers and seems to show a negative impact on not only the person who is racially degraded but the society which condones it is presented in a bad light. The Shifting Heart by Richard Beynon and The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini are two prime examples of how racism can affect people and society and how the constant conditioning of people will cause them to have underlying issues, such as racist tendencies and intolerance. They show the psychology of racism is underpinned by social values and a “mob mentality”, both texts portray accurate representations of racism in the time but also show how we can use this hindsight to move towards a society which has no racial…

    • 1671 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deadly Unna is a great novel, which explores the different themes and problems which Aboriginals face today. Author Phillip Gwynne has managed to talk about the racial feelings of Aboriginals and Australians through the characters. It explores the themes of racism, identity and determination and many more.…

    • 880 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    ‘Deadly Unna’ written by Phillip Gwynne, shows us through the main character's eyes, a large range of bullying styles which are physical, verbal, mental, and emotional. This novel shows a good understanding of Australian life in the country with football and how it can bring people together, the crime thats happening in the Port and how it can tear people apart.…

    • 559 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deadly Unna Themes

    • 764 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Deadly Unna? By Phillip Gwynne is a novel based on the fictional one year life of a fourteen year old boy named Gary 'Blacky ' Black. The story shows a developing friendship between Gary, an Anglo-Saxon boy and Dumby Red, an Aboriginal boy. With this friendship Gary begins to understand his own morality with lessons of human dignity, racism, justice, death, courage, family and most importantly friendship. The story is structured around AFL and shows how sport can bring a divided community together every winter.…

    • 764 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Clarry’s racists attitudes are evident in a number of scenes at the start of the play.For example ,on a number of occasions when Clarry is speaking with Poppa,his father in law and a man much older than him,he addresses him as “boy”.in the context of post-war Australian values that were quite intolerant towards the recent immigrants,like the biancis, this is a typical condescending attitude.…

    • 254 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    To understand the defining factors in the process of Blacky’s change of identity, we must first understand identity itself. What is identity? Is it defined by ethnic origin, faith or rather a place within oneself. The individuals we surround ourselves with weather they are involuntarily forced upon us or associated by choice or with great reluctance, these individuals have the power to alter the way in which we view the world and it’s people. In Phillip Gwynne’s novel "Deadly Unna?” The main protagonist Blacky is observant and pessimistic, he perseveres in his school work, according to Blacky displaying dissimilar behaviour to the other boys in his year. Blacky possesses aspirations far beyond the bounds of the port, although he has these aspirations he has obtained a loss of faith, lack of direction and extensive amounts of self doubt realising the limitations the port bears, preventing him to act on his aspirations. Although he may view himself contrastingly in comparison to the rest of the port, he still remains nescient and neglectful towards the prejudice and divide between the white and indigenous australians, disregarding the issue as a “Fact of life” and continually denominating people without a second thought. It wasn’t until Dumby Red’s indirect influence triggered a change in Blacky that he realised the immorality of his actions towards racial division whilst not exactly derogatory was not assisting the problem. Although Dumby Red initiated the change in Blacky, he wasn’t the only contributor to blacky’s change. As we come of age, we begin to perceive things that were once ignorantly obscure to our former youthful selves; and in coming of age, he realises his father isn’t worth living in fear from, and the blunt, critically vehement denominations that come from his mouth mean nothing because in the end he is ultimately the failiure, and in discovering this revelation blacky was finally…

    • 3264 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Australian Rules, a low budget film directed by Paul Goldman, was first shown at the Sundance film festival in 2002. This film portrays a consequential manifestation of racial discrimination and small-town bigotry and its impact on society, and different social classes, through the use of many filming conventions. Australian Rules follows the protagonist Gary Black as he grows and therefore changes to realise the unfair and unjust society he lives in and its demeaning view on Aboriginal people and other social groups and stereotypes.…

    • 1032 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deadly Unna is a novel written by Phillip Gwynne. The novel showcases the effects that racism can have in a small community through the protagonist Gary ‘Blacky’ Black and how Blacky’s awareness of the racist attitudes shown by his townspeople from The Port, towards the nungas (aborigines) from The Point increases. This is eventually shown at the end when Blacky and all his siblings paint over the writing ‘boongs piss off.…

    • 600 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Recitatif” is a story about Twyla and Roberta; two characters of different race that accidently meet every couple of years. From the onset of the story, Morrison introduces the story with a racist thought from Twyla, stablishing the story’s main topic is race. The story in general is to get the reader to contemplate on the significance of the story. She does this by never unveiling the race of either character. Instead she uses various social codes to help the reader identify the race of each character. Also, “Morrison has explored the experience and roles of black women in a racist and male dominated society. Besides revealing the hurt caused by racial discrimination and segregation to the black women, she has also described their inner psychological world twisted by the dominated white society” (Li-Li, WANG). Furthermore, Maggie is also another significant character. Twyla and Roberta detested Maggie and thought Maggie deserved all the hate and suffering. Most importantly, “Recitatif” is a “work exposing society’s unspoken racialized codes” (Stanley, Sandra Kumamoto). Therefore, the message Morrison is reflecting is the issue that lies in our society. In…

    • 926 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deadlly Unna

    • 787 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In Phillip Gwynne’s novel, ‘Deadly Unna?’ one of the major themes explored throughout the book is racial and gender division. This book is situated…

    • 787 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Hjaksdhjkahsdjkhasjkda

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Dumby Red had perfect teeth and was medium height. And he run pretty fast. He looks pretty good and would be a nice guy. Blacky didn’t like him so much because he was jealous of Dumby’s skill. But then he started to like him because he helped him from the Nunga.…

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adam Goodes has a very ‘Goode’ AFL history including two Brownlow medals, two premierships, three time Sydney Swans leading goal kicker, Goodes was picked four times to be in the AFL ‘All Australian’ team, Goodes won ‘AFL rising star’ and is also in the ‘Indigenous team of the Centaury’ team. There are 71 Indigenous players in the AFL and Adam Goodes is the only one booed which clearly proves that Goodes has either rubbed fans up the wrong way or is being booed due to his ‘Goode’ footy skills. Sydney Swans Chairman Adam Pridham believes that Goode’s booing is a combination of racism and tall poppy…

    • 525 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    No Sugar

    • 967 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Racism and discrimination were both major worries concerning Aboriginals throughout the Great Depression. Jimmy Munday is the major protagonist of the play. He is the son of the wise and knowledgeable Gran Munday. As an indigenous Nyoongah man in his forties, he represents the link between the traditional culture and a straightforward involvement. He is seen as one of those outspoken characters in No Sugar which is portrayed as persistently rebelling the discriminatory and bigoted attitude towards the Aboriginals. Racial discrimination is clearly revealed in the White society when they plan to relocate the Government Well Aboriginals, solely because the town wants to be devoid of all things related to Aboriginals. Jimmy persistently continues to treat the White society with hatred even though he realises that he is relatively powerless. He continues to voice the discrimination he feels, ‘You reckon blackfellas are bloody mugs. Whole town knows why we’re goin. Coz Wetjalas in this town don’t want us ere,…

    • 967 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    No Sugar

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Throughout Australian history a racist attitude towards Aboriginals has been a significant issue. From the moment the early settlers arrived on our shores and colonised, the Aboriginals have been fighting for the survival of their culture. The Aboriginals haven been take in and dominated to bring them in line with an idealistic European society. These themes have been put forward by Jack Davis in his stage play, No Sugar, the story of an Aboriginal family's fight for survival during the Great Depression years. Admittedly Davis utilises his characters to confront the audience and take them out of their comfort zone, showing them the reality of Aboriginal treatment. This is an element of the marginalisation that Jack Davis uses through out the play this starts from the beginning where he discomforts the audience by using an open stage. One character that Davis uses through out the play is A.O. Neville, Davis uses him to portray the issue of power, this is a very important issue that is carried through out the play.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    book of negroes essay

    • 1014 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In a person’s life, there will be times when one loses them self in the large and unpredictable world. An individual will be worse off, no matter what kind of losses an individual has to suffer. This is shown in The Book of Negroes. The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill is a fictionalized, historical account that explores the story of the protagonist, Aminata, who is separated from her home, family, culture and faith. This book demonstrates the effectiveness of Hill's ability to portray imagery. Hill uses effective imagery to emphasize the fact that often loss is worse than death itself. This is shown through the book when Aminata loses her parents, her child and her home. These losses are worse than death itself.…

    • 1014 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics