Page 26 - Luce 2022
P. 26

S enior  C o mmon  Ro om





          Literary Happenings


          Around the College

                            College Librarian & Records
                            Officer, Cindy Derrenbacker,
                            recalls some of the literary
                            events and highlights of 2022.

                            Small Habits Compound Over Time
                            For some time, I have wanted to
                            introduce the JCH community to
                            James Clear’s international bestseller,
                            Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven
          Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones. I am often
          sceptical of self-help books, but I know people in varied
          places and contexts who have read this book and found that
          its central argument rings true – that ‘real change comes from
          the compound effect of hundreds of small decisions’– what   ‘Primed for Poetry’ Forum
          Clear calls ‘atomic habits’, (atoms, of course, being very small   Tutor and doctoral candidate Jack Tan and I organised a
          but powerful).                                     Thursday night forum in September, in advance of the annual
                                                             Literature Dinner featuring Evelyn Araluen and her acclaimed
          During Discovery Week, early in semester 1, we had the   book of poetry and prose, Dropbear.
          opportunity to discuss this book. Unfortunately for the tutors
          and students who gathered, COVID precautions demanded   The purpose of the forum was multi-faceted: to discuss the
          that we revert to Zoom. Nevertheless, our discussion was   genre of poetry in general terms and to highlight one or
          lively, enhanced by some who had read Clear’s book and   two published JCH poets; to draw on Dr Spencer-Regan’s
          had applied the principle that ‘tiny changes can produce   knowledge as a poetry scholar; to read, hear, and tease out
          remarkable results’. One student gave the example that the   the meaning of some of Araluen’s poetry; and for students to
          simple shift in behaviour of making his bed each morning had   informally share their own poetry with the community – all
          a ripple effect on his overall organisation, productivity, and   in anticipation of the Literature Dinner. We were delighted by
          confidence in other areas. The general idea is that by making   the students’ enthusiasm for and engagement with all things
          daily a small (1%) change in attitude and decision-making   poetic that were clearly evident that evening!
          with regard to your dreams and goals, your identity changes
          and the effects of small habits compound over time.
                                                             Literature Dinner
          As I reflect on the books I have read this year, I suspect this is   The Literature Dinner was warmly received by the College
          one to which I will return.                        community. Because another article in this issue of Luce
                                                             features this event, I will reflect on the final charge of the
                                                             evening that Ms Araluen gave to the student audience: the
          Japanese Bookbinding: Creating a Hand-Bound Book   importance of reading, especially to the development of one’s
          Even if you prefer the ease of a Kindle while travelling or   writing skills.
          listening to an audiobook while walking, there is something
          wonderful about the material book that most readers   And how does one read to write better, one may ask? In
          appreciate. As College Librarian, I am keen to find ways to   light of Araluen’s charge, I want to recommend a book from
          connect university students with words and books (beyond   our collection entitled Reading Like a Writer: A Guide for
          academic textbooks) through varied means. To that end, on   People Who Love Books and for Those Who Want to Write
          the evening of 5 May, the Library hosted and subsidised a   Them (Francine Prose). Written in 2006, this New York Times
          Japanese hardback bookbinding course in which nine students   bestseller provides a lucid response. In sum, the author
          and Briana Ellis, the Dean of Studies, each made a beautiful,   recommends a close reading of a wide range of respected
          handsewn book over the course of three hours.      authors, as quality reading informs and helps to shape
                                                             good writing. She advises reading slowly, savouring words,
          Should you like to try your hand at this craft, we have a   sentences, and paragraphs. She also suggests reading carefully
          recommended reference book in the Library collection   for delight, rather than for criticism.
          on general bookbinding, purchased during the Melbourne
          lockdowns, Bookbinding: the complete guide to folding,   One other aspect of the Literature Dinner that I want to
          sewing & bending (Morlok, Waszelewski).            highlight was that student recipients, Kyla Fritz and Emily
                                                             Mannix, were awarded the Katherine Firth and Andreas
                                                             Loewe Book Grants for 2022. These grants are for the
                                                             development of each recipient’s personal book collection.
                                                             Interestingly, both students selected a copy of Shelley’s
                                                             Frankenstein, and one or more of Jane Austen’s novels,
                                                             among other titles.

      26    LUCE  Number 21  2022
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