Wednesday, November 21, 2007

King Canute and the Lucky Country

Our language is peppered with unique phrases harking back to other times. Fossilised imprints of ideas remain in the collective mind long after the actual knowledge they represent has died away. Often the intent of the phrase is ironic. Language is a subtle creature where the merest tilt of a word can provide sufficient wiggle room to squirm out of most predicaments.

The caretaker (or possibly undertaker PM judging by the tenor of the anti-union scare campaign) PM has attained the status of a Jedi knight for his use of lexiconic gymnastics. As a tribute to this virtuosity, I offer two such allusions which demonstrate the fragile nature of meaning: King Canute and the Lucky Country.

King Canute was a Danish king of England during the 11th century. He is best remembered for attempting to hold back the tide. The tide was not so obliging. A Canute in common parlance is one who resists the bleeding obvious to no avail, possibly involving a spectacularly conceited act of hubris. Only it does not really mean that at all. The whole point of Canute's placing his throne on the beach was to demonstrate to his sycophantic courtiers that there were limits to the king's power. The real cautionary tale is lost by losing the edge of meaning. It is a lesson that rulers of whatever colour forget at their peril. This is clearly the case with the aforementioned PM's contemptous treatment of workchoices and climate change.

The expression 'the lucky country' was popularised after the historian Donald Horne's book of the same name was released in the 1960s. Horne warned that an Australia blessed with agricultural riches should not be complacent and rely on utopian (or perhaps for Kevin Rudd, brutopian) abundance. The warning tone of the message seems to go missing at times, the title seen as a note of thanks or an observation that 'she'll be right' on a national level.

The current context of the 'lucky country' phrase relates to economic prosperity, particularly in relation to securing the future post the China/India boom. The binary opposite popularised in the 1980s was that Australia should become the clever country, an idea that seems to have collapsed on the Howard watch. Clearly a student of Horne's true meaning would advocate upskilling our students to function in an information economy and have a forward planning approach to issues such as climate change.

When next you hear one of those obscure allusions like Canute and his penchant for paddling consider the true meaning behind the easy phrase. It will surely be more enlightening than listening to 'working families' and 'union bosses' repeated five hundred times.

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