RANGES TRADER STAR MAIL
Home » Opinion » A novel about self-discovery

A novel about self-discovery

To describe Emma Ling Sidnam’s Backwaters as the journey of a fourth-generation Chinese New Zealander to discover her identity is to underestimate the book’s rich complexity.

To praise it as a story that will attract readers of this or that author with Asian ancestry is to narrow its scope, limiting its universal appeal and reducing its value to a piece of “ethnic work”.

Like the first-person protagonist Laura, we have all asked ourselves the question: “Where are we from?” But, unlike Laura, only some of us have been asked the question: “Where are you really from?”

If this question gets thrust upon you simply because of how you look, even though you were born and have lived here all your life – it really makes you wonder about your existence.

Unless you can find the answer that satisfies your heart and soul, you will never rest.

For identity is much more than how others identify you – it is also how you define yourself.

In Backwaters, Laura embarks on a journey to find an answer that will give her peace.

Her sense of being neither here nor there – that she is not enough to own and belong to either space – prompts her to explore the nature and significance of her heritage.

“I just want to fit in,” Laura admits.

“And be accepted as a New Zealander and not asked where are you from? everywhere I went.”

Yet, even a DNA test cannot give her a definite answer, because any specific label, like “Chinese” or “New Zealander”, is ambivalent and open to a myriad of interpretations.

“It tells me naught about who I am as a person, except that I am a mix of things and my history is ambiguous, and I already know that.”

While working on a project about the Chinese New Zealander experience, Laura comes across a diary supposedly written by her great-great-grandfather, Ken, one of the earliest Chinese settlers in Aotearoa who worked as a market gardener during the gold rush days.

The more she gets to know about the sojourner – the man who felt like a foreigner in his home country and then built a home of his own in a foreign land – the better she understands that life is what you choose it to be, a self-made and self-sustained mixture of disappearance and discovery, fulfilling and forgetting, fact and fiction, memory and reality, and giving and forgiving.

In Laura’s words: “All the stories that got me here… they play back in my head like a sped-up film. These stories might be the backdrop to my life, but they don’t determine who I become next.”

Instead of internalising what others see in her and then defining herself accordingly, she recognises the need to see herself as who she wants to be.

Winner of the 2022 Michael Gifkins Prize, Backwaters is all about the bittersweet search for belonging.

It shows us a way to find confidence and courage to claim our own stories.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Macclesfield conservationist awarded OAM

    Macclesfield conservationist awarded OAM

    Macclesfield conservationist Alan David Clayton has been awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the General Division for service to conservation, the environment, and to the community.…

  • 13-year-old honoured for environmental leadership

    13-year-old honoured for environmental leadership

    Ferny Creek resident, Coen Pearson has already established himself as a leader in environmental conservation, earning Yarra Ranges Council’s Young Environmental Achiever of the Year award. The 13 year-old has…

  • Structure fire in Macclesfield extinguished by local CFA brigades

    Structure fire in Macclesfield extinguished by local CFA brigades

    CFA crews responded to a structure fire in Macclesfield on Wednesday 21 January. The house was already fully involved in fire upon arrival of CFA units and crews worked quickly…

  • Banks closed nationwide on Australia Day

    Banks closed nationwide on Australia Day

    All banks across Australia will be closed on Monday, 26 January, in observance of Australia Day. Customers are encouraged to plan ahead, as in-branch services will be unavailable for the…

  • Communications crucial in bushfire

    Communications crucial in bushfire

    It’s been a difficult and anxious week for many as bushfires rip through the state, inching close to our own community on Friday 10 January. Marked the worst fire danger…

  • Hamnet deserved better at Golden Globes

    Hamnet deserved better at Golden Globes

    The 83rd Golden Globes took place on January 12, and I have mixed feelings about the results. Nikki Glaser hosted the ceremony for the second time this year, and once…

  • Lilydale Lakeside Writers Group

    Lilydale Lakeside Writers Group

    Lilydale Lakeside Writers Group A guest article by Leanne Margaret Christine’s Note: Many thanks to local author Leanne Margaret, of Croydon, for sharing her experiences and insights of hosting the…

  • Dark Times

    Dark Times

    Cartoonist Danny Zemp reflects on all the negativity in the world. Sometimes, you just need a hug.

  • ‘A mockery’: Kangaroo shooting continues during bushfires

    ‘A mockery’: Kangaroo shooting continues during bushfires

    Wildlife rescuers are demanding the State Government put a halt to the commercial killing of kangaroos as countless animals lie burned and suffering in blackened smoldering forests. This year’s catastrophic…

  • Road policing heats up for Aus Day weekend

    Road policing heats up for Aus Day weekend

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 316738 Police are urging motorists to prepare for a busy period on Victorian roads as a statewide road policing operation effort kicks off for…