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Issue Details: First known date: 1997... 1997 The Spy Who Loved Children : The Enigma of Herbert Dyce Murphy
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

The Secret Life of Spies and Novelists : Herbert Dyce Murphy and Patrick White Bruce Bennett , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Studies , vol. 2 no. 2010;
'This article considers the 'secret life' of two Australians who worked for brief periods in intelligence and transmuted aspects of their experience in stories they subsequently told. Herbert Dyce Murphy's depictions of himself as a 'lady spy' in Europe in the early 1900s came to influence Australia's premier novelist Patrick White in the characterisation of his homosexual protagonist in White's novel The Twyborn Affair (1979). For Dyce Murphy and White, as for W H Auden and others, the image of the spy held maginative appeal as a way of projecting the necessary disguises, subterfuges and possibilities that a life of secrecy entailed.' (Author's abstract)
The Secret Life of Spies and Novelists : Herbert Dyce Murphy and Patrick White Bruce Bennett , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Studies , vol. 2 no. 2010;
'This article considers the 'secret life' of two Australians who worked for brief periods in intelligence and transmuted aspects of their experience in stories they subsequently told. Herbert Dyce Murphy's depictions of himself as a 'lady spy' in Europe in the early 1900s came to influence Australia's premier novelist Patrick White in the characterisation of his homosexual protagonist in White's novel The Twyborn Affair (1979). For Dyce Murphy and White, as for W H Auden and others, the image of the spy held maginative appeal as a way of projecting the necessary disguises, subterfuges and possibilities that a life of secrecy entailed.' (Author's abstract)
Last amended 16 Feb 2011 15:39:12
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