AustLit
Latest Issues
Contents
- Dorothy Hewett's Garden and City, single work criticism (p. 19-31)
- Dorothy Hewett and the Left, single work criticism (p. 32-52)
- A Ride with Love and Death: Writing the Legend of a Glittering Girl, single work criticism (p. 53-69)
- "Bobbin Up" and the Working-Class Novel, single work criticism (p. 70-88)
- Dorothy Hewett and Contemporary Australian Drama, single work criticism (p. 95-114)
- Negative and Positive: Dorothy Hewett in Visual Images, single work criticism (p. 115-126)
- Imaging Dorothy Hewett, single work criticism (p. 127-140)
- Seeking Woman : Dorothy Hewett's Shifting Genres, single work criticism (p. 147-162)
- Representations of Female Identity in the Poetry of Dorothy Hewett, single work criticism (p. 163-179)
- The Wheel, the Mirror and the Tower: Desire in the Writings of Dorothy Hewett, single work criticism (p. 180-201)
- `Dreams... Visions... Spells... Stoies': Representations and Identity in `Bon-Bons and Roses for Dolly', single work criticism (p. 202-216)
- `Up in the Bio-Box': The Use of Hollywood Myth in Some Early Dorothy Hewett Plays, single work criticism (p. 217-235)
- Dorothy's Reception in the Land of Oz: Hewett Among the Critics, single work criticism (p. 236-255)
- A Check List of Works By and About Dorothy Hewett, Lawrence Bourke , single work bibliography (p. 256-294)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
-
Literary Body or Critical Corpse?
single work
review
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography -
Looking for the Soft Spot
2018
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 77 no. 3 2018; (p. 35)'Biographies OF Dorothy Hewett (1923-2002) usually include a short section like this: In 1944 she married communist lawyer Lloyd Davies and had a son who died of leukemia at age three. The marriage ended in divorce in 1948, following Hewett's departure to Sydney to live with Les Flood, a boilermaker, with whom she had three sons over five years'. That was from Wikipedia. It's just a few sentences, a handful of facts notable for many reasons, working backwards: the quick succession of births, the shift from a middle-class; marriage into a working-class one, the death of a child. He was her first child, named Clancy after the Aboriginal activist Clancy McKenna. Clancy, the child, was born in Perth and died tragically in Melbourne in 1950. The thing that snippet from Wikipedia doesn't make clear—that few biographies explore further than the bare facts-is that when Hewett left Davies, she left Clancy too. His sickness and death came the following year.' (Introduction)
-
Reading the Metaphors of Tree and Island in Kenneth Slessor, Judith Wright, and Dorothy Hewett
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , December vol. 25 no. 2 2011; (p. 185-190) -
Untitled
1997
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Studies , Winter vol. 12 no. 2 1997; (p. 125-126)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography -
Untitled
1995
single work
review
— Appears in: Fremantle Arts Review , April/May vol. 9 no. 8 1995; (p. 15)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography
-
Defiant Pioneers
1995
single work
review
— Appears in: The Age , 18 February 1995; (p. 8)
— Review of No Place for a Nervous Lady : Voices from the Australian Bush 1984 anthology correspondence ; Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography ; Our Own Matilda : Matilda Jane Evans 1827-1886 : Pioneer Woman and Novelist 1994 single work criticism biography -
Forecasts
1994
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Bookseller & Publisher , December vol. 74 no. 1054 1994; (p. 25,28)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography -
Talent Fainter on the Airwaves
1995
single work
review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 25 February 1995; (p. 11A)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography ; Off the Air : Nine Plays for Radio 1995 selected work drama -
Voices from the West
1995
single work
review
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 4 March 1995; (p. C12)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography ; Tilting at Matilda : Literature, Aborigines, Women and the Church in Contemporary Australia 1994 anthology short story criticism extract poetry ; Off the Air : Nine Plays for Radio 1995 selected work drama -
A Spacious Lineage
1995
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , April no. 169 1995; (p. 50-51)
— Review of Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995 anthology criticism biography bibliography -
Reading the Metaphors of Tree and Island in Kenneth Slessor, Judith Wright, and Dorothy Hewett
2011
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , December vol. 25 no. 2 2011; (p. 185-190) -
Looking for the Soft Spot
2018
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 77 no. 3 2018; (p. 35)'Biographies OF Dorothy Hewett (1923-2002) usually include a short section like this: In 1944 she married communist lawyer Lloyd Davies and had a son who died of leukemia at age three. The marriage ended in divorce in 1948, following Hewett's departure to Sydney to live with Les Flood, a boilermaker, with whom she had three sons over five years'. That was from Wikipedia. It's just a few sentences, a handful of facts notable for many reasons, working backwards: the quick succession of births, the shift from a middle-class; marriage into a working-class one, the death of a child. He was her first child, named Clancy after the Aboriginal activist Clancy McKenna. Clancy, the child, was born in Perth and died tragically in Melbourne in 1950. The thing that snippet from Wikipedia doesn't make clear—that few biographies explore further than the bare facts-is that when Hewett left Davies, she left Clancy too. His sickness and death came the following year.' (Introduction)