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A love story unfolds. Under a lemon tree, two teenage boys meet in the light of a full moon. Neddy, a wannabe warrior from the Mountain Mob, and Ty, a storyteller from the River Mob, are tasked with exchanging information about the strangers who have landed on their shores. Starting out defensively, full of teenage bravado, their uneasy friendship grows into tender love; they're young men on the brink of an adulthood that promises all love has to offer. But trailing their every move is an army of invaders, bringing with them cultural shifts, moral judgement and deadly disease. When history…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A love story unfolds. Under a lemon tree, two teenage boys meet in the light of a full moon. Neddy, a wannabe warrior from the Mountain Mob, and Ty, a storyteller from the River Mob, are tasked with exchanging information about the strangers who have landed on their shores. Starting out defensively, full of teenage bravado, their uneasy friendship grows into tender love; they're young men on the brink of an adulthood that promises all love has to offer. But trailing their every move is an army of invaders, bringing with them cultural shifts, moral judgement and deadly disease. When history comes knocking, love is tested to its limits. Whitefella Yella Tree by Dylan Van Den Berg is a stunning exploration of young, queer love and Country in the midst of invasion, told with a fierce poetic vision and razor-sharp wit. Winner of the 2023 NSW Premier's Literary Award for Playwriting.
Autorenporträt
Dylan is a playwright and dramaturg. A Palawa person from the northeast of lutruwita/Tasmania, Dylan's work explores Black identity by pivoting narratives that are already part of our national consciousness to embolden Indigenous perspectives. He tells stories where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have agency over their futures and draws on both Western and First Nations theatrical traditions. In 2021, his play Milk premiered at The Street Theatre and won the NSW Premiers Award Nick Enright Prize for Playwriting. The play was described as a new and powerful development in Australian First Peoples' theatre? (Canberra Critics' Circle). Milk is published by Currency Press.