When we start talking about “the
Paris end of Charles Street”, and comparing a precinct with Melbourne’s Lygon
Street, and in a congratulatory way, you just know the plot has been lost. You also know that it is a 'blow in' talking.
The Tamar/Esk region is neither ‘wilderness’ nor ‘pastoral’,
it is what it is with its own idiosyncrasies. Even if the colonials wanted to
imagine that ‘this place’ reminded them of home elsewhere – Cornwall for heaven’s sake – and for whatever
reason, looking back, and thinking ahead, you just know that a point has been
missed somewhere.
For 30,000 plus years before the British arrived the pakana and palawa people clearly knew who where they were, where they were and how to be in the world. And they were doing so in ways that we might yet aspire towards if respect is paid to our ‘placedness’.
For 30,000 plus years before the British arrived the pakana and palawa people clearly knew who where they were, where they were and how to be in the world. And they were doing so in ways that we might yet aspire towards if respect is paid to our ‘placedness’.
If cultural tourism is to be any kind of economic force the people of
the Tamar/Esk region need to be ‘at home’ here without imagining
themselves as a paler shade of elsewhere – because
we are not. If ‘Tamareskians’ are not at home in their own skin, in their own place
and with their own stories, how could they possibly welcome ‘Elsewhereians’
into their place and make them at home? What could they possibly have to offer them
that would be worth having or coming here to experience? Tourists aspire to being comfortably at home
elsewhere – even if it is somewhere exotic.
For these, and many other reasons, ‘Tamareskians’ need a vernacular
press that belongs to the 21st Century and to ‘this place’. No longer
can a boardroom somewhere else deliver ‘the goods’ to us.
Perhaps the globalised narratives that are being ‘tweeted’ at us from afar in 140 character soundbytes can be delivered by them but not our stories. We might need to be aware of this stuff but we do not need to be drowned in it.
Perhaps the globalised narratives that are being ‘tweeted’ at us from afar in 140 character soundbytes can be delivered by them but not our stories. We might need to be aware of this stuff but we do not need to be drowned in it.
So, against this background there is a core of ‘investors’ willing to
give a ‘Tamar Publication’ a go. We are looking for collaborators more
than anything else. That is people with ideas, skills, ability, resources, cash
even, to invest in a ‘community cultural enterprise’ that
delivers more than a cash dividend.
If this sounds like anything you or any of your associates would want to be a part of as either a mentor, contributor, collaborator, advertiser, client, or even donor, then an ‘Investors Meeting’ is being planned for the very near future. Please eMAIL an 'Expression of Interest' and you will be included in the planning loop.
Please eMAIL Tandra Vale: oceanview@tassie.net.au with your Expression of Interest and contact information. When we receive your emails well decide on a venue and we will place you on the mailing list. We look forward to hearing from you.
You may also use the COMMENT SECTION below to register your interest and provide your eMAIL address.
If this sounds like anything you or any of your associates would want to be a part of as either a mentor, contributor, collaborator, advertiser, client, or even donor, then an ‘Investors Meeting’ is being planned for the very near future. Please eMAIL an 'Expression of Interest' and you will be included in the planning loop.
You may also use the COMMENT SECTION below to register your interest and provide your eMAIL address.
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