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A dystopian or utopian future? Claire G. Coleman’s new novel Enclave imagines both

<p>I was reading Noongar author Claire G. Coleman’s third novel, <a href="https://www.hachette.com.au/claire-g-coleman/enclave" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Enclave</a>, a few days after the US Supreme Court <a href="https://theconversation.com/us-supreme-court-overturns-roe-v-wade-but-for-abortion-opponents-this-is-just-the-beginning-185768" target="_blank" rel="noopener">overturned</a> the Roe v Wade judgement, a political victory for a conservative project many years in the making.</p> <p>As Michael Bradley argues in <a href="https://www.crikey.com.au/2022/06/27/trumps-activist-supreme-court-abortion-us-christian-theocracy/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">his recent article in Crikey</a>, those driving this project “want to live in the America of their small imaginations: white, straight, patriarchal, Christian and mean”.</p> <p>Such small imaginations also inhabit the world of Enclave. Divided into two parts, the novel opens in a dystopian society just enough like our own to be disconcerting.</p> <p>The third-person narrative is told from the perspective of Christine, who is soon to turn 21. She has recently completed her undergraduate degree and is about to enrol in a Masters of Pure Mathematics. She has grown up in a walled town ruled by a Chairman and controlled by an Agency full of identity-less men in charcoal suits, backed up by security forces. People are led to believe that the widespread <a href="https://theconversation.com/big-brother-is-watching-how-new-technologies-are-changing-police-surveillance-115841" target="_blank" rel="noopener">camera surveillance</a> and armies of <a href="https://theconversation.com/eyes-on-the-world-drones-change-our-point-of-view-and-our-truths-143838" target="_blank" rel="noopener">drones</a> keep them safe.</p> <p>The world is hotter than our own, so everyone lives indoors in temperature-controlled environments. Opening a window in your own home is enough to alert the security forces. Light does not illuminate – it sneaks up, heats up, blinds and glares. It is violent and ugly bright, not unlike the “blank and pitiless” gaze from W.B. Yeats’ poem <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43290/the-second-coming" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Second Coming</a>.</p> <p>Christine lives a life of seemingly immense privilege. Servants are bussed in from outside the wall each day to serve her every whim. The <a href="https://theconversation.com/algorithms-can-decide-your-marks-your-work-prospects-and-your-financial-security-how-do-you-know-theyre-fair-171590" target="_blank" rel="noopener">algorithms</a> of the Enclave’s social network anticipate and manufacture desires that are met before Christine is even aware she has them.</p> <p>The Safetynet’s news service feeds residents a constant stream of images of the terror, violence and chaos outside the wall, from which the Agency is protecting them.</p> <p>The people of the Enclave live in uncannily similar homes that all seem new – even the faux old buildings of the University. They present perfectly manicured and curated lives on Safetynet socials. The town is nominally Christian, but no one goes to church.</p> <p>Christine is just starting to wake up to the reality of her situation. Her family is cold and loveless. Her father is a callous and unfeeling patriarch who works for the Fund, which controls the finances of the town. He wants Christine to do the same, at least until she gets married.</p> <p>Her mother drinks herself numb during endless long lunches with empty women who all share the same cosmetic surgeon. She exhorts her daughter to do the same, which is both menacing and hangover-inducing.</p> <p>Christine’s brother Brandon, a clone of her father, is a business student preparing to work for the Fund. He is, as she suggests, a real dick.</p> <p>Christine is also mourning the mysterious disappearance of her best friend Jack who, in a dig at the handful of controversially well-funded programs in the Australian university system, studied in the <a href="https://theconversation.com/western-civilisation-history-teaching-has-moved-on-and-so-should-those-who-champion-it-97697" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Western Civilisation Studies</a> department. She is awaiting a message from him through a secret channel. It never arrives.</p> <h2>Becoming illegal</h2> <p>Life in the Enclave is deeply oppressive, not to mention boring. Questioning the status quo is not tolerated. The lonely, loveless and listless descriptions of Christine’s world are enervating.</p> <p>Although she is meant to be rather smart, Christine has a remarkable lack of curiosity – an effect, one supposes, of the world in which she is raised. But for the first time in her life, she is starting to notice that all of her servants are brown-skinned or darker. Though they move around her home silently, catering to her every need, she doesn’t know any of their names.</p> <p>Things come to a head when she sees for the first time that one female servant in particular is breathtakingly beautiful. She feels desires that she wasn’t aware were even possible, and kisses her. They are caught on one of the many surveillance cameras. Her family is appalled, not only because Christine is attracted to a woman, but to a dark-skinned woman. According to her father, this makes her a “dyke, race traitor, bitch”. (I was more concerned about the power dynamics between master and servant.)</p> <p>Christine is cut off from everything – money, accommodation, communication – and taken into custody. She thus learns that Safetown, the name of her walled Enclave, is actually a private facility, so being without support is trespass. She is, in effect, illegal.</p> <p>Safetown, it transpires, is one of several organisations that established walled enclaves made possible by earlier government policies and laws. It is an economic and socio-political enclave started by extremely wealthy people, to produce and sustain a homogenous society.</p> <p>Christine is cast into the world outside Safetown: a hellish liminal zone where sunburned white exiles, dressed in rags and living off soup kitchens, slowly go mad. In this violent and dangerous place, people survive by trapping rats and pigeons with discarded wire. This wasteland is littered with corpses, evidence of prior occupation of the land on which Safetown was built.</p> <h2>Utopian and dystopian</h2> <p>Coleman’s vision is both utopian and dystopian. The world of the Enclave is a dystopia created in an attempt to realise an exclusive utopian vision: a homogenous world of straight white people served by a coloured underclass. In Safetown, everyone believes themselves to be protected from the chaos and violence outside the wall.</p> <p>Part two reveals Safetown as the walled dystopia the reader already knows it to be. And it offers a revised postcolonial and queer utopia – a place of radical inclusivity, in the form of a more technologically advanced version of Melbourne.</p> <p>Buildings are covered in plants to combat climate change. Trains are free to keep cars off the road. There is a universal income. Education is free and world-class. There is no surveillance or drones. Food is multicultural and always delicious; the coffee uniformly good (in that sense, not too different from Melbourne today):</p> <blockquote> <p>It was like a fever dream of a civic heaven, all light and beauty and people in connection with the natural world, which appeared to be invited into all human spaces […] And everywhere there were people, men, women, people she could not determine either way, every spectrum of skin colour from darker than Sienna to lighter than her.</p> </blockquote> <p>Like all literary utopias, Coleman’s idealised city reminds us that change is possible if we can imagine an alternative vision that makes change worth fighting and hoping for. But the novel also falls prey to the dangers of all utopias with its ideological certainty, its lack of nuance, the totality of its vision, and its dehumanisation of those who don’t share it.</p> <p>Surely, I’m not the only reader who is suspicious of a <a href="https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-our-utopia-careful-what-you-wish-for-165314" target="_blank" rel="noopener">utopia</a> in which everyone is beautiful. And a place where everyone is happy all the time has its own sinister and coercive feel, flying in the face of the human condition as it does.</p> <p>Having said that, Enclave is a novel that inclines towards hope. It touches on many of the issues of our own world – the ecological crisis, the scourge of racism, Australia’s treatment of refugees, greed and the manufacture of algorithm-driven desires, our acceptance of widespread digital surveillance and stolen attention, and the refusal to adequately acknowledge prior occupation and dispossession. It also reminds us of the dangers of the othering politics of fear.</p> <p>Enclave’s epigraph and some of its section titles are taken from Yeats’ The Second Coming, which describes a strange alternative to the prophesised return of Jesus. The poem opens in a world spiralling into chaos where</p> <blockquote> <p>The best lack all conviction, while the worst<br />Are full of passionate intensity.</p> </blockquote> <p>The Second Coming proposes a catastrophic and apocalyptic vision for a world on the brink of self-destruction that seems all too apt for the present moment. Coleman’s novel offers us an alternative: a world in which people, in meeting the demands of the present with curiosity, courage and conviction, can bring about a more just and inclusive future.</p> <p><em><strong>This article originally appeared on <a href="https://theconversation.com/a-dystopian-or-utopian-future-claire-g-colemans-new-novel-enclave-imagines-both-182859" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Conversation</a>.</strong></em></p> <p><em>Images: Goodreads</em></p>

Books

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First look at The Crown’s new Queen

<p>Fans of the hit Netflix series rejoice! The official Twitter account for cult show <em>The Crown</em> has unveiled the first look at the new Queen Elizabeth.</p> <p>Replacing the show’s current leading lady, Claire Foy, in the Golden Globe-winning series, Olivia Colman has now stepped in to play the Queen for the next two seasons, which is currently in production.</p> <p>On Monday, Netflix gave the world a sneak peek of Colman in character as the new Queen Elizabeth on the set of <em>The Crown</em>, releasing a first look of the upcoming series on Twitter.</p> <blockquote class="twitter-tweet"> <p dir="ltr">Patience. <a href="https://t.co/7F2f2aBON3">pic.twitter.com/7F2f2aBON3</a></p> — The Crown (@TheCrownNetflix) <a href="https://twitter.com/TheCrownNetflix/status/1018752145192050688?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">16 July 2018</a></blockquote> <p>In April, Colman expressed her excitement over her chance to play the role of Queen Elizabeth in a statement, which was also released on Twitter.</p> <p>"I'm so thrilled to be part of <em>The Crown</em>," the actress exclaimed. </p> <p>"I was utterly gripped watching it. A proper 'just one more' feeling. I think Claire Foy is an absolute genius. She's an incredible hard act to follow. I'm basically going to re-watch every episode and copy her."</p> <p>As the series progresses through the decades of the current monarchy, other cast members that are also set to be replaced are Matt Smith’s character as Prince Philip, who will be played by Tobias Menzies. Meanwhile, Helena Bonham Carter will take over the role of Princess Margaret, which was played by Vanessa Kirby.</p> <p>Bonham Carter told <em>Variety</em> at the <em>Ocean’s 8</em> premiere recently that she had already “started prepping” ahead of filming her new TV role.</p> <p>"It's exciting. We start in a few weeks, and I think we're all – we're completely terrified," Bonham Carter admitted.</p> <p>"I think also because the first two seasons were such a success, we have the onus of inheriting the responsibility of doing justice to all these genuinely famous people, and then on top of it, inheriting them from this previous generation of actors who've done such good jobs."</p> <p>Are you a fan of <em>The Crown</em>? What do you think of these new cast replacements? Tell us in the comments below.</p>

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“The Crown” paid Prince Philip more than the Queen

<p>You would think in this era of female empowerment, with the #TimesUp and #MeToo movements at the forefront of the minds of all in the entertainment industry, pay disparity is surely coming to an end. Well, think again.</p> <p>It’s been revealed that Netflix has been paying its male lead in the hit series <span>The Crown</span>, Matt Smith (who plays Prince Philip), more than its female lead, Claire Foy (the Queen).</p> <p>The explosive revelation came during a panel discussion about the program at the INTV Conference in Jerusalem yesterday. When asked if the series paid Foy more than Smith, producers Suzanne Mackie and Andy Harries revealed the opposite case was true.</p> <p>“The producers acknowledged that [Smith] did make more due to his <span>Doctor Who </span>fame, but that they would rectify that for the future,” <em>Variety </em><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://variety.com/2018/tv/news/the-crown-season-3-donald-trump-megan-markle-1202725163/" target="_blank">reported</a></span></strong>.</p> <p>“Going forward, no one gets paid more than the Queen,” Mackie added.</p> <p>But is it too little too late? <span>The Crown</span>’s third season will be its last with Foy and Smith as its leads before an older cast <a href="/entertainment/tv/2017/10/netflix-announces-claire-foys-replacement-as-queen-in-the-crown/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">replaces their roles</span></strong></a>, so Foy would only get to enjoy one season of pay parity.</p> <p>If the Queen can’t get equal pay, what hope is there for the rest of us?</p> <p><em>Image credit: Netflix.</em></p>

Money & Banking

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“The Crown” star Claire Foy’s sad announcement

<p>Claire Foy, best known for playing the Queen on Netflix’s hit drama <em>The Crown</em>, has split from her husband of four years, actor Stephen Campbell-Moore.</p> <p><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7815721/gettyimages-529181678_498x245.jpg" alt="Gettyimages -529181678" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>The former couple first met while working together on the set of<em> Season of the Witch</em> in 2011. They were married in 2014 and welcomed their first child together, a daughter named Ivy Rose, a year later.</p> <p>“We can confirm that we have separated and have been for some time,” they said in a statement released to the media. “We do however continue as great friends with the utmost respect for one another. We ask for our privacy during this time.”</p> <p>The split comes just months after Stephen underwent lifesaving surgery to remove a brain tumour.</p> <p>According to the <em>Daily Mail</em>, Foy was seen not wearing her wedding ring on the red carpet at the BAFTAs last week.</p> <p>Speaking to <a href="https://www.thesun.co.uk/tvandshowbiz/5647856/claire-foy-splits-husband-stephen-campbell-moore/" target="_blank"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Sun</span></em></strong></a>, a friend of the pair said the separation came as a “real shock” to their friends and loved ones.</p> <p>“They’re lovely people and are determined to keep everything civilised,” the friend said. “Obviously it has been a very sad period for both of them, and for their wider families.</p> <p>“But they are wonderful parents, intelligent and both successful in their own right. They’ve just decided that unfortunately their relationship simply wasn’t working and that this would be for the best.”</p> <p><em>Image credit: Netflix.</em></p>

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Adam Sandler blasted for repeatedly grabbing "The Crown" star Claire Foy’s knee

<p>Adam Sandler has been slammed for repeatedly touching Claire Foy’s knee during an interview on The Graham Norton Show, leaving Foy and fellow guest Emma Thompson looking very uncomfortable.</p> <p>Viewers immediately took to social media to question why the actor kept placing his hand on the The Crown star’s knee when she made repeated efforts to move it away.</p> <p>Unfortunately her efforts to pat away his hand went unnoticed as Sandler soon returns his hand back on her knee.</p> <p>Emma Thompson, noticing Sandler’s repeated gesture, also looked on in confusion.</p> <p>Sandler seemed oblivious and continued telling his story, touching the leg of Thompson as well, his co-star in the new Netflix film The Meyerwitz Stories.</p> <p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/-R6UzMN_z3o" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe></p> <p>One viewer wrote on Twitter: “Claire Foy replacing Adam Sandler’s hand onto his own knee rather than hers, was the perfect ‘haha don’t touch me again’ move #GrahamNorton.”</p> <p>While another said: “Adam Sandler has no social awareness of how awkward he seemed to be making Emma Thompson and Claire Foy #stoptouching #GrahamNorton.”</p> <p>A spokesman for Sandler described the actor’s actions as a “friendly gesture”.</p> <p>It comes after the Harvey Weinstein scandal in Hollywood, with a string of A-listers accusing the powerful executive of a string of sexual assault crimes, including a number of rape allegations.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>

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Netflix announces Claire Foy’s replacement as Queen in “The Crown”

<p>Netflix has just announced who will be replacing Claire Foy as Queen Elizabeth II in the popular award-winning historical drama of British royalty, <em>The Crown.</em></p> <p>Olivia Coleman has been crowned as the new monarch and will portray Queen Elizabeth into middle age for seasons three and four.</p> <p><img width="436" height="323" src="http://akns-images.eonline.com/eol_images/Entire_Site/2017926/rs_1024x759-171026153308-1024-the-crown-claire-foy-olivie-colman.jpg" alt="The Crown, Claire Foy, Olivia Colman" border="0" class="image--full" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>Claire Foy (left) and Olivia Coleman (right). </em></p> <p>Coleman recently took home a Golden Globe for her work in AMC's mini-series The Night Manager and will next be seen in Kenneth Branagh's star-studded adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express.</p> <p>The Crown creator Peter Morgan has always said he would be recasting the Queen as the story moved through the years, rather than “age up” Foy.</p> <p>“What’s so beautiful about Claire is her youth,” he told Variety in 2016. “You can’t ask someone to act middle-aged. Someone has to bring their own fatigue to it. The feelings we all have as 50-year-olds are different than the feelings we all have as 30-year-olds. That informs everything we do.”</p> <p>However, season two is only just about to star so it will be awhile before we see Coleman as the Queen.</p> <p>With Foy's replacement in place, we wonder who will join Coleman as <span>Matt Smith</span>'s replacement in the role of Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh.</p> <p>We can’t wait to hear what the Queen thinks about Coleman’s eventual portrayal – <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/entertainment/tv/2017/05/has-the-queen-watched-the-crown/">she’s reportedly a fan of the show.</a> </strong></span></p>

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