Paige Spence Paige Spence i(8375240 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 International Publication Pathways for Australian Comic Books and Graphic Novels Per Henningsgaard , Paige Spence , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Publishing Research Quarterly , March vol. 38 no. 1 2022; (p. 189–208)

'This article answers the question, ‘What are the pathways that Australian creators of comic books and graphic novels commonly follow in order to be published by international publishing houses?’ This research question is significant because it combines two historically distinct fields of research—comics studies and publishing studies—and because it identifies the business practices that determine the comic books and graphic novels by Australian creators that are read by both Australian and international audiences. This article reveals that the interactions of creators and publishing professionals prior to a submission have a formative influence on the pathways to successful publication.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Amy Louise Maynard : A Scene in Sequence : Australian Comics Production as a Creative Industry 1975–2017 Paige Spence , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Publishing Research Quarterly , September vol. 36 no. 3 2020; (p. 496–497)

— Review of A Scene in Sequence : Australian Comics Production as a Creative Industry 1975-2017 Amy Louise Maynard , 2017 single work thesis

'Discussion about the production and distribution of comics by Australian creators is a rare sight in any form, especially within an academic context. This remains the case despite a move by the general population towards celebrating diverse forms of pop culture and the gradual rise of comics studies as a legitimate field of research over the last two decades. The absence of such discussion may lead one to question whether Australian works of the medium actually exist in any substantial number—even within the country, local comics stores are stacked with international imports and any film adaption of a comic book is predictably tied to foreign origins. However, despite this lack of prominence in the public and academic eye, the production of comics is hardly absent in the country; Australian stakeholders have contributed to the medium’s modern history since the 1970s. In Amy Louise Maynard’s doctoral thesis A Scene in Sequence: Australian Comics Production as a Creative Industry 19752017, this little-explored network of comics creators, producers, editors, sellers, cultural intermediaries and the scene they create is provided significant academic attention for the first time in a decade. By framing this network as a creative industry, Maynard provides an extensive examination of historical and contemporary Australian comics production.'  (Introduction)

1 Age 21, Drowned i "A boy once slipped", Paige Spence , 2017 single work poetry
— Appears in: Creatrix , March no. 36 2017;
1 Things i "Why do things fall off tables?", Paige Spence , 2013 single work poetry
— Appears in: Ipswich Poetry Feast 2013;
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