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Stephen Knight Stephen Knight i(A16127 works by) (a.k.a. Stephen Thomas Knight)
Also writes as: Tom Street
Born: Established: 1940
c
United Kingdom (UK),
c
Western Europe, Europe,
;
Gender: Male
Visitor assertion Arrived in Australia: 1963 Departed from Australia: 1992
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Works By

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1 'Such Sadism, Such Pain' : Three Novels about Historical Masculinity Stephen Knight , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 452 2023; (p. 38-39)

— Review of A Man of Honour Simon Smith , 2023 single work novel ; The Death of John Lacey Ben Hobson , 2023 single work novel ; The Investigators Anthony Hill , 2023 single work novel

'In recent historical fiction, women authors have explored the Australian past from a female viewpoint, as in Kate Grenville’s A Room Made of Leaves (2020), focusing on Elizabeth Macarthur, and Anita Heiss’s Bila Yarrudhanggalangdhuray, River of Dreams (2022), about Wagadhaany, an Indigenous woman from the Murrumbidgee River. As if in response to such potent novels, now comes a trio expressing historical masculinity.' (Introduction)

1 Departments and Discussions Stephen Knight , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: The Work of History : Writing for Stuart Macintyre 2022;
1 Detection and Gender in Early Crime Fiction : Mrs Bucket to Lady Molly Stephen Knight , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Crime Fiction Studies , vol. 3 no. 2 2022; (p. 89-105)

'Crime fiction is often mistakenly held to be based on books and male detection. In fact, in the nineteenth century periodicals were a major mode of publication and from the mid-century on women inquirers played a recurring role in the developing genre, while most early male detectives were, by later standards, distinctly under-gendered. Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal was a major early source; by the 1860s, female detectives were being created by male writers and in Bleak House (1852–53), Dickens gave Inspector Bucket’s wife distinct inquiring capacities. The major Australian author Mary Fortune – with more than four hundred stories in magazines over forty years from the 1860s – developed female inquirers over time. By the 1890s, professional English woman detectives were created, Loveday Brooke by C.L. Pirkis and Florence Cusack by L.T. Meade, while Baroness Orczy created as well as her best-selling ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’ the leading police detective Lady Molly, like the others first appearing in magazines.'

Source: Abstract.

1 The University Is Closed for Open Day Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 The Clues Were There All the Time : The Mystery of Australian Crime Fiction Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 Modern Machines and Machinations Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 I'm Driving Myself : The Poetry of Car Plates and Names Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 Marksism Today Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 Unravelling Travelling and Its Enfironments Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 White Australia or Fair Australia? : Indigenous Fiction Tells the Story Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
1 Did Matilda Want to Waltz? : Fiction before the Bush Myth Stephen Knight , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century 2019;
'Australia is deeply enmeshed with the myth of the bush, which is nevertheless an elusive place to describe. It might be rural, even hilly, terrain not very far from the coast; it might be flatter and dryer and further inland, where it can also be called the outback; it can even be, and in some sense centrally is, the huge arid spaces of the continental centre that have been collectively named the 'never-never', regions that seem beyond time. Essentially, the bush is not urban, though it may contain occasional far-separated small cohabitation. What it is not is a city or a town. Yet by the late nineteenth century, when the bush myth developed, already two-thirds of Australians lived in large urban areas, and theirs is now a very highly urbanised country: the bush myth is not in reality based on a nationally dominant formation.' (Introduction)

 
1 y separately published work icon The University Is Closed for Open Day : Australia in the Twenty-First Century Stephen Knight , Carlton : Melbourne University Publishing , 2019 26749866 2019 selected work criticism

'Where is analysis in this age of banal tweets and narcissistic comments? Stephen Knight turns his modernly analytical and historically aware mind to current attitudes and actions in need of serious examination. What is the impact of the bush myth on the national consciousness of Australian fiction? What of the modern shift in writing about Indigenous issues, from white writers to First Peoples? What has suddenly happened to Australian crime fiction? Other essays look at unravelling travelling, the tiny machines that obsess us, then those bizarrely flourishing modern identity-enhancers & tattoos and personalised number plates; and of course, the state of the contemporary university. Here is 21st century national complexity, its origins and its international connections, explored in a socially referential and almost always serious way.' (Publication summary)

1 Peter Corris’s Cliff Hardy Was a Genuine Australian International Crime Fiction Hero Stephen Knight , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 31 August 2018;

'By the 1970s Australian crime fiction was drifting.

'The genre had a long history, back to convict days, when it dealt with unfair convictions and brutal treatments, most famously in Marcus Clarke’s For The Term Of His Natural Life (1870-2).' (Introduction)

1 From Convicts to Contemporary Convictions – 200 Years of Australian Crime Fiction Stephen Knight , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: The Conversation , 13 July 2018;

'Most countries produce crime fiction, but the versions vary according to national self-concepts. America admires the assertive private eye, both Dashiell Hammett’s late 1920s Sam Spade and the nearly as tough modern feminists, such as Sara Paretsky. Britain prefers calm mystery-solvers, amateurs like Hercule Poirot or Lord Peter Wimsey or sensitive police like Ian Rankin’s Edinburgh-based John Rebus. The French seem to favour semi-professionals who are distinctly dissenting – in 1943 Léo Malet’s Nestor Burma stood up to Nazi occupiers nearly as overtly as to Paris criminals.'  (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon Australian Crime Fiction : A 200-Year History Stephen Knight , Jefferson : McFarland and Company , 2018 14051346 2018 multi chapter work criticism

'Australian crime fiction grew from the country's modern origins as a very distant English prison. Early stories described escaped convicts becoming heroic bushrangers, or how the system maltreated mis-convicted people.

'As Australia developed, thrillers emerged about threats to the wealth of free settlers and crime among gold-seekers from England and America, and then urban crime fiction including in 1887 London's first best-seller, Fergus Hume's Melbourne-located The Mystery of a Hansom Cab.

'The genre thrived, with bush detectives like Billy Pagan and Arthur Upfield's half-Indigenous `Bony', and from the 1950s women like June Wright, Pat Flower and Patricia Carlon linked with the internationally burgeoning psychothriller. Modernity has massified the Australian form: the 1980s saw a flow of private-eye thrillers, both Aussie Marlowes and tough young women, and the crime novel thrived, long a favorite in the police-skeptical country. In the twenty-first century some authors have focused on policemen, and more on policewomen- and finally there is potent Indigenous crime fiction.

'In this book Stephen Knight, long-established as an authority on the genre and now back in Melbourne, tells in detail and with analytic coherence this story of a rich but previously little-known national crime fiction.'(Publication summary)

1 Why Did Hume's The Mystery of a Hansom Cab Move so Fast Stephen Knight , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Towards Sherlock Holmes: A Thematic History of Crime Fiction in the 19th Century World 2016; (p. 157)

'Crime fiction has many authors, very many readers, and also a number of myths. One is that the whole thing started with Poe, a view favored by those unaware of earlier authors who developed the form before the brilliant Philadelphian made myth out of mystery and detection. Another is that Raymond Chandler was a great popular private-eye author—in fact his first novel sold in sober hardback and he was always better-received among the English literati of his own origin, a context which gave class and confidence to his reshaping of Hammett's edgy populism. The myths also have it that Sara Paretsky was the first of the feminist mystery authors—in fact several others preceded her by a decade or more, but they have been effectively obscured by the firmness and flourish which in her Chandleresque way she brought to the form, or the anti-form. A negative myth is the topic of this chapter—why has no-one ever offered any explanation for the runaway success of the first novel by an author who went on to write many with nothing of the same success, who set it in far-away Melbourne, Australia, and yet saw his novel The Mystery of a Hansom Cab take London by bibliocommercial storm in very late 1887, so much so it gained the title of the first best-seller in crime fiction? Unlike Fergus Hume's more than a hundred other novels, 40 more years of mysteries and sensational stories, the book has almost always been in print, usually in a cheap format and occasionally with a short, gesturing introduction. It has been at times mentioned as a freak and very rarely described in very limited detail. There is now from the Melbourne scholar Lucy Sussex a full account of the context, production and promotion of the book, and it seems time it came in from the critical cold.' (Introduction)

1 y separately published work icon Towards Sherlock Holmes: A Thematic History of Crime Fiction in the 19th Century World Crime Fiction in the 19th Century World Stephen Knight , Jefferson : McFarland and Company , 2016 10923144 2016 multi chapter work criticism

'Crime fiction–a product of the burgeoning metropolis of the 19th century–features specialists who identify criminals to protect an anxious citizenry. Before detectives came to play the central role, the protagonists tended to be lawyers or other professionals. Major English writers like Gaskell, Dickens and Collins contributed to the genre–Fergus Hume's The Mystery of a Hansom Cab was a best-seller in 1887–and American and French authors created new forms. This book explores thematic aspects of 19th century crime fiction's complex history, including various social and gender roles between different time periods and settings, and the imperial elements that made Sherlock Holmes seem dynamically contemporary.' (Publication summary)

1 Peter Temple’s Truth and Truthfulness : “The Liquid City, the Uncertain Horizon” Stephen Knight , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 16 no. 2 2016;
'The essay first locates Temple among Australian authors and this novel among his work. It then explores meaning in the plot and structure of the novel, and next focuses on the charaterisation of the leading police detective in it, Steven Villani. A following section analyses the stylistic and tonal approaches Temple tales in this novel, and finally the essay summarises the meaning and impact of Truth.' (Publication abstract)
1 y separately published work icon The Politics of Myth Stephen Knight , Melbourne : Melbourne University Press , 2015 10688122 2015 multi chapter work criticism

'In The Politics of Myth, Stephen Knight studies nine figures still vividly alive, all of them appearing in twenty-first century film and television. Analysing how they relate to the major themes of Power, Resistance and Knowledge, he shows how fact and fiction mix to help us explore and understand the complexities of our world.

'Surprising mythic shifts occur across time. Robin Hood can be a tough anti-authoritarian, a genial aristocrat, a Saxon patriot; Queen Elizabeth I has been seen as a Protestant heroine, a love-lorn lady, even a grumpy manipulator. From Merlin's multiple manifestations and Sherlock Holmes's smoking habits to the ongoing arguments about Ned Kelly, this book explores the richness and the range of figures of myth. ' (Publication summary)

1 All Hail i "After that bigger splash,", Stephen Knight , 2014 single work poetry
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 74 no. 3 2014; (p. 181)
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