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Root & Branch

Essays on inheritance

Author: Eda Gunaydin  

Paperback

Exquisitely written, Eda Gunaydin's essays unsettle neat descriptions of inheritance, belonging and place.

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Summary

Exquisitely written, Eda Gunaydin's essays unsettle neat descriptions of inheritance, belonging and place.

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Description

Winner, Victoria Premier's Literary Awards 2023, Non-fiction


I have come to see that I am an argumentative person who is frequently convinced that my angle, my take, on a matter, is the right one. This kind of delusional self-belief is not rewarded in many other spheres of social life, so I write essays.

There is a Turkish saying that one's home is not where one is born, but where one grows full doduun yer deil, doyduun yer. Exquisitely written, Root & Branch unsettles neat descriptions of inheritance, belonging and place. Eda Gunaydin's essays ask: what are the legacies of migration, apart from loss? And how do we find comfort in where we are?

'In Root & Branch, Eda Gunaydin's essays showcase the fine craft of a writer whose seemingly dispassionate observations set a wide stage for astute, deeply considered reflections on place, people, politics and power. It takes immense skill to weave personal narratives seamlessly into broader conversations and complex social commentary. To do so in an effortless manner, as Gunaydin has accomplished, is pure alchemy. This is a book I will revisit many times for both the beauty of its language and for the generous opportunities to think and learn alongside the writer. A moving, thought-provoking and truly stunning debut.' - Eileen Chong

'Root & Branch is a book of autobiographical essays that pay careful attention to, in Gunaydin's words, "the materiality of living": sore feet, varicose veins, fast food and other everyday events in working-class life. It is also funny, self-deprecating, self-dramatising and hopeful: a searching and multi-faceted debut.' - Anwen Crawford

'Julia Kristeva once wrote that "You are a genius to the extent that you are able to challenge the sociohistorical conditions of your identity." Identity not in its censual use, i.e. sex, class, religion; identity rather as the set of ideologies we carry with us: the spirit of an age, the normative practices of personhood, language and narrative, and the bromides of accepted wisdom. The Eda of Gunaydin's formidable essays is shrewd, compassionate, revolutionary, and yes, unmistakably a genius. This book is the exorcism I've been waiting for.' - Ellena Savage

'Gunaydin's work, and it is work, lands with a deceptive lightness on the page and its readers. Its weight grows on us over time reminders of the daily inheritance of trauma, responsibility and structures over which we can only sometimes wrest control. Forget vital or necessary. Root & Branch is knowing and real. In every essay, Eda circles something much bigger than the sum of her experience and thought, as both witness and participant, in which we as readers are left guessing our place.' - Alison Whittaker

'What has always struck me about Eda Gunaydin's essays is their remarkable and balanced movement, the deft way they bring together a fierce intelligence and political consciousness with a depth and complexity of feeling, as well as a wicked sense of humour and of the absurd. They are forthright and passionate, but also playful, cynical and sharp, and keenly interested in all of the ordinary ways that extraordinary historical and social forces are felt across our lives, and what it means to both bear and resist their weight.' - Fiona Wright

'Gunaydin is a gifted essayist driven by an honest desire to see society transformed, "to alter the conditions of everyday existence, so that there's nothing that we need to be saved from". Gunaydin's ability to combine a searing intellect with wit and ingenuity is breathtaking.' -Books+Publishing

'Important and significant. Much more so than most other books, Root & Branch has the potential to leave a unique, lasting impression on the reader.' -Roland Leikauf, Australian Maritime Museum's Curator of Post-War Immigration, Signals magazine

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Critic Reviews

“'It takes immense skill to weave personal narratives seamlessly into broader conversations and complex social commentary...This is a book I will revisit many times for both the beauty of its language and for the generous opportunities to think and learn alongside the writer. A moving, thought-provoking and truly stunning debut.' -- Eileen Chong”

Root & Branch is the debut essay collection from Eda Gunaydin, Turkish-Australian scholar and writer of academic and creative nonfiction. It examines with spectacular tenacity and wit the real-world impacts that class, race, gender and capitalism have on the everyday experience of contemporary Australians, particularly those living in Sydney's inner-west and western suburbs. Each essay draws on Gunaydin's expertise in post-disciplinary and post-colonial studies, and her experience of growing up in Australia as a second-generation Turkish immigrant dealing with emotional abuse, complex trauma and other mental health issues. In 'Dogdugun Yer, Dogdugun Yer' Gunaydin explores the difference between a home versus a homeland, while in 'Shit-eating' she deconstructs the class politics of modern 'brunch' culture. Underpinning many of these essays is Gunaydin's troubled relationship with her emotionally abusive and hypochondriac mother, of which she reveals much, but not all. 'Tell-all' explores the current culture of 'mindless' confessionalism, boldly questioning the author's own impulse to 'make disclosures, endlessly'. Gunaydin is a gifted essayist driven by an honest desire to see society transformed, 'to alter the conditions of everyday existence, so that there's nothing that we need to be saved from'. Gunaydin's ability to combine a searing intellect with wit and ingenuity is breathtaking. Readers of Ellena Savage and Maria Tumarkin will relish this magnificent collection.  Jacqui Davies is a freelance writer and reviewer based in South Australia.

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About the Author

Eda Gunaydin is a Turkish-Australian essayist and researcher whose writing explores class, capital, intergenerational trauma and diaspora. You can find her work in the Sydney Review of Books, Meanjin, The Lifted Brow and others. She has been a finalist for a Queensland Literary Award and the Scribe Nonfiction Prize. Root and Branch is her debut essay collection.

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More on this Book

I have come to see that I am an argumentative person who is frequently convinced that my angle, my take, on a matter, is the right one. This kind of delusional self-belief is not rewarded in many other spheres of social life, so I write essays. There is a Turkish saying that one's home is not where one is born, but where one grows full - dogdugun yer degil, doydugun yer. Exquisitely written, Root & Branch unsettles neat descriptions of inheritance, belonging and place. Eda Gunaydin's essays ask: what are the legacies of migration, apart from loss? And how do we find comfort in where we are? 'In Root & Branch , Eda Gunaydin's essays showcase the fine craft of a writer whose seemingly dispassionate observations set a wide stage for astute, deeply considered reflections on place, people, politics and power. It takes immense skill to weave personal narratives seamlessly into broader conversations and complex social commentary. To do so in an effortless manner, as Gunaydin has accomplished, is pure alchemy. This is a book I will revisit many times for both the beauty of its language and for the generous opportunities to think and learn alongside the writer. A moving, thought-provoking and truly stunning debut.' -- Eileen Chong ' Root & Branch is a book of autobiographical essays that pay careful attention to, in Gunaydin's words, "the materiality of living": sore feet, varicose veins, fast food and other everyday events in working-class life. It is also funny, self-deprecating, self-dramatising and hopeful: a searching and multi-faceted debut.' -- Anwen Crawford 'Julia Kristeva once wrote that "You are a genius to the extent that you are able to challenge the sociohistorical conditions of your identity." Identity not in its censual use, i.e. sex, class, religion; identity rather as the set of ideologies we carry with us: the spirit of an age, the normative practices of personhood, language and narrative, and the bromides of accepted wisdom. The Eda of Gunaydin's formidable essays is shrewd, compassionate, revolutionary, and yes, unmistakably a genius. This book is the exorcism I've been waiting for.' -- Ellena Savage 'Gunaydin's work, and it is work, lands with a deceptive lightness on the page and its readers. Its weight grows on us over time - reminders of the daily inheritance of trauma, responsibility and structures over which we can only sometimes wrest control. Forget vital or necessary. Root & Branch is knowing and real. In every essay, Eda circles something much bigger than the sum of her experience and thought, as both witness and participant, in which we as readers are left guessing our place.' -- Alison Whittaker 'What has always struck me about Eda Gunaydin's essays is their remarkable and balanced movement, the deft way they bring together a fierce intelligence and political consciousness with a depth and complexity of feeling, as well as a wicked sense of humour and of the absurd. They are forthright and passionate, but also playful, cynical and sharp, and keenly interested in all of the ordinary ways that extraordinary historical and social forces are felt across our lives, and what it means to both bear and resist their weight.' -- Fiona Wright 'Gunaydin is a gifted essayist driven by an honest desire to see society transformed, "to alter the conditions of everyday existence, so that there's nothing that we need to be saved from". Gunaydin's ability to combine a searing intellect with wit and ingenuity is breathtaking.' -- Books+Publishing

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Product Details

Publisher
NewSouth Publishing
Published
1st May 2022
Pages
288
ISBN
9781742237312

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23%
RRP $29.99
$23.09
Or pay later with
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