Page 17 - Luce 204
P. 17

NE WS  AND  E VENT S                                                             NE WS  AND  E VENT S




 Janet Clarke Hall Oratory Competition...  ...and Lucas Dell’s Winning Oration


 Barrister and co-founder of the Damian   with everyday advocacy that led us to name the competition
 Powell Oratory Competition, Brian Kennedy   after Dr Damian Powell – a man who stood at the College’s
 lectern to deliver in a relatable and friendly manner, countless
 (Resident Tutor 2016) reflects on the role of   speeches helping the orderly everyday running of the College.)
 oratory in today’s world.  The so-called digital existence has not altered the need to create
 and deliver careful arguments. Many are aghast at social media
 With the kind permission of the College, my wife Laura   platforms’ promotion of clickbait and echo chambers, with the
 Hartmann1 and I founded the annual Oratory Competition.   threats to civil society that have followed. As long as this technology
 It is the only oratory competition currently run in any of the   is to be used to misinform the masses, patient persuasion,
 colleges affiliated with Melbourne University. Our goal is   encouragement of critical thought and listening will remain crucial
 to encourage all Janet Clarke Hall students to benefit from   tools in deradicalisation. These are the crucial skills of the orator.
 participation in the competition.
 This year, His Honour Justice Attiwill kindly agreed to
 The practice of oration continues to play a critical role in our   adjudicate. It was a great pleasure to see His Honour (who is a
 society today, giving individuals the opportunity to engage in   highly regarded member of the judiciary and who was prior to
 an artform with real benefits for those who practise it well. Good   that a leading member of Victoria’s Commercial Bar) provide
 orators are able to command ideas and words to evoke a deep   personalised and very generous feedback to each participant.
 response in their audience – the persuasion moving something   The audience enjoyed an evening of thought-provoking   (L-R) Back: Isobel Whitehead, Luka Venables, The Hon. Justice Richard Attiwill, Brian Kennedy, Anna Ryley, Keeley Zentgraf, Jiealla (Gigi) Guttie-Galpin
 in the listener.2  Whilst the term ‘oration’ is seen as lofty, we   orations on the thorny topic of ‘cancellation’.  Front: Charles Whyte, Lucas Dell, Dante Duell
 encourage participants to think about the everyday advocacy   Why do we do hard things? Seriously, I wanna know!   struggle, I assumed it was because I was being punished –
 that is all around us – the delivery of the sports report at Formal   1 Laura Hartmann is General Counsel at Grampians Health, and is also   Somewhere, in the timeline of evolution, we went from hunting   because I was a bad person. Hard was punishment.
 Hall, or the likelihood that confident public-speaking will be   brilliant, beautiful and persuasive.    a couple of gazelles in the savanna with the lads, to going ‘you
 2 James A Winans, ‘Aims and Standards in Public Speaking Work’ (1923)
 beneficial in many forms of employment. (It was this concern   12(4) The English Journal 223, 227.  know what, let’s strap three guys to a rocket full of explosives   I don’t believe that anymore, or if I’m honest, I’m not sure what
            and blast them to the moon’. That is certifiably, undisputably,   I believe. I guess I know now that struggle is necessary. And
            crazy! Crazy hard that is. But these days, hard is going extinct –   believe me, if someone discovers a way to become a better
 Spring Concert  one of his all-time favourite pieces. He also remarked on   it’s getting cancelled.   version of yourself without hardship, I’ll be the first to sign up.
 the fact that Josh introduced us to some pieces by Spanish    But struggle, failure, even pain – these are the moments that
 composer and pianist, Mompou, whose works are not so   Everywhere I look, everything looks like it’s becoming so easy.   shape us, that give us purpose. That’s life in its rawest form.
 often performed. I had not heard of Mompou (1893 –1987)   Entertainment is as simple as pressing a button on Netflix,   Wait! Okay, that’s too much philosophy for one speech. If I’m
 and was pleased to enjoy his music. Having Josh explain a   dating has been reduced to swiping left or right on an endless   not careful I might start writing ‘to be or not to be’ on the
 little about each piece enhanced the experience and made   stream of pictures.  windows of the Betty Wilmot at 2 am. The point is Robert
 the afternoon a most enjoyable one.  Even the hardest thing I’ve ever done – going from an obese to   Nozick, the philosopher, asserts that no sane person would ever
 Josh concluded the program with two more pieces by Chopin   a healthy weight – looks like it’s becoming easier through new   enter the pleasure machine, because it cancels what it means
 – Nocturne in F Minor Op.55 No.1 and Scherzo No.2 in B flat   medicine and technology.   to be fundamentally human. To live real experiences, real
 minor Op 31. As another member of the audience commented,  But that’s a good thing, right?   struggles, that’s what makes life rewarding. And that’s how it
 ‘the time just flew by listening to so much beautiful music’.  stood for a long, long, long, time.
            Hard things take time and money and energy, and all the
 As mentioned previously, Josh was resident at JCH for   resources that we can now invest into doing the things we   (10-second pause)
 ten years and expressed his deep appreciation for the   actually care about.   That was ten seconds. Did it feel long? Uber Eats, Instagram
 scholarships he received from JCH, enabling him to live in a   Reels, TikTok, YouTube, Tinder – it’s all rotting your attention
 The sun was streaming through the windows of the Dining   community close to the university and one that has a Kawai   No! We’ve hit a tipping point where, in trying to make life easier,   span and your brain. We have become victims of a culture of
            we’re cancelling out the very things that give life its depth.
 Hall when Dr Joshua  Hooke (2012) alumnus and ten-year   grand piano. Born in Carlton but growing up in Wonthaggi,   instant gratification.
 resident of JCH, played the first notes of Mozart’s Fantasie   Josh commenced music lessons at age four. The fact that   There is a concept in philosophy called the pleasure machine.   Why climb that mountain, or talk to that cute girl or learn how
 in C Minor K457, a beautiful piece to open the 2024 Spring   his mother was the music teacher at his local primary   And before you all groan, don’t worry this is not going to be   to speak Italian, when an endless stream of perfectly calculated
 Concert program. This was followed by Paisajes (Landscapes)   school played an important part in his early introduction to   your grandfather’s philosophy lecture – I’ll keep it interesting,   and addictive entertainment is just one scroll away? Pfft, I
 composed by Federico Mompou and included three parts: i.   music. Other people influential in leading him to a career   so stick with me.   mean look at you – getting antsy as you try to endure even this
 La Fuente y la campana (The fountain and the bells); ii. El Lago   in music were Vaune Lewis during secondary school, also   short five-minute speech. And look, look, I’m not your mum,
 (the Lake); iii. Carros de Galicia (Galician carts).   at Wonthaggi, and Ian Holtham and Mark McGee at the   The pleasure machine is a thought experiment. If you could
 University of Melbourne.  attach yourself to this machine, with electrical wires and drugs   you know it’s bad for you, and we all know that we don’t really
 To conclude the first part of the program, Josh played Sergei   pumping into and out of your brain, you would experience   care – I certainly didn’t bust out the quill and scroll to write this
 Rachmaninoff’s Preludes Op.32 No.5, Op.32 No.12 and then   Josh’s career now includes solo performances with Musica   endless pleasure and bliss, wouldn’t you? Sounds enticing,   speech.
 Op.23 No.2. As Josh later commented, Rachmaninoff was one   Viva as well as in London, Vienna, Lisbon and Bergen ‘ the   doesn’t it. Let me be clear, you would experience the happiest   But you do have to accept that staring at your phone for five,
 of the first composers of piano music with whom he became   artist’s village’ in the Netherlands. In 2024, Josh produced   moments of your life, and being in the machine, you wouldn’t   six or sixteen hours a day is in some small part cancelling
 obsessed. For the concert, he enjoyed revisiting this particular   a CD that featured Beethoven and Schubert and he is now   know the difference – it would feel real, but it wouldn’t be real.   your human experience. We have replaced hard with mind-
 piece, as well as learning new pieces along the way.   enjoying being back in Australia, while also looking forward   It’s a Faustian bargain, you lose your independence and your
 to doing more recording. We were privileged to have Josh   humanity, but you gain ‘happiness’. What is happiness?  numbingly easy. And I guess the question we have to ask is: are
 Frederic Chopin’s Polonaise-Fantasie set the scene for the   as the Spring Concert musician and can be grateful for the   we okay with that?
 second half of the program and, learning this piece, Joshua   people and the scholarships that have assisted him in his   You know, as a little Christian boy, I don’t think I got how   Because this life is real, and your phone is one pleasure machine
 explained that it allowed him to explore new ideas and   musical journey.  religion works. I used to think that you just sort of put your   you can unplug from. Look – I don’t know if there’s more to this
 delve a little more deeply into the repertoire of one of the            hands together and ask God to cancel out whatever problem   world after I die, but if there’s one thing I know, it is that I really,
 composers most famous for piano compositions. Professor   Genevieve Leach  you were having that day. I wanted to be skinny, or to have   really hope there are Instagram Reels in heaven.
 Stephen McIntyre, in the audience, commented that it is   Acting Deputy Principal (Feb - Sep 2022)   friends or to pass my grade 4 spelling test, or whatever the hell
            – and when I didn’t get those things and had to endure the   Thanks, everyone!
 16  L u ce    Number 23  2024                                                                  Janet Clar ke Hall  17
   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22