Seumas Spark Seumas Spark i(A109767 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Pascoe's Vision : Musings on Life and Country Seumas Spark , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 465 2024; (p. 14. 16)

— Review of Black Duck : A Year at Yumburra Bruce Pascoe , Lyn Harwood , 2024 single work autobiography

'I'm a whitefella who has never met Bruce Pascoe, but I’ve heard a lot about him. For the past few years, I have worked across Gippsland in the field of Aboriginal cultural heritage, and many of the people I meet mention his name. Experience has led me to try and dodge most of these conversations, knowing that our discussion will probably satisfy neither party, but I’m not having much luck. People want to talk about Pascoe, and often it is unpleasant. I have heard him described as a charlatan and worse, usually by those who have not met him, spoken with him, or read his work. Most of these critics are whitefellas, preoccupied with questioning or discrediting his Aboriginal heritage.' (Introduction)

1 Labour of Love : Uncovering and Understanding a Family Story Seumas Spark , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , January - February no. 461 2024; (p. 36)

— Review of Paul and Paula Tim McNamara , 2024 single work biography
'In Working: Researching, interviewing, writing, published in 2019, the great biographer Robert A. Caro tells of his writing methods and the lengths to which he goes to gain a better understanding of his subject. Reading Tim McNamara’s Paul and Paula, I was reminded of Caro’s way of research and writing and of his determination to place himself in his subject’s milieu. McNamara spent considerable time in Vienna researching Paul and Paula, stalking the streets for clues, and his efforts show. He writes with verve about the book’s three main characters – Paul Kurz and his wife, Paula, and the city of Vienna, before and during the Nazi occupation – and his search to uncover and understand their stories.' 

(Introduction)          

1 The Lebers, a Family of Ratbags Seumas Spark , 2023 single work column
— Appears in: Inside Story , November 2023;

'Shaped by history, Sylvie Leber and her forebears have campaigned for social change'

1 3 y separately published work icon Shadowline : The Dunera Diaries of Uwe Radok Uwe Radok , Jacquie Houlden , Seumas Spark , Clayton : Melbourne University Press , 2022 24856518 2022 single work diary

'In September 1939, Britain declared war on Germany, and the life of Uwe Radok, a young German-born engineer working in Scotland, changed forever. Classified as an ‘enemy alien’, Uwe was deported to Canada on the Arandora Star. When the ship was torpedoed, drowning more than 800, Uwe and his brothers survived – only to be marched onto the infamous Dunera, bound for Australia.

'From 1940 to 1943 Uwe kept a series of diaries. Their pages offer a remarkable account of the effects of displacement. The harrowing voyage and the tedium of indefinite detainment are rendered with clarity. Over time, this gives way to an exploration of the contours of love, as Uwe formed a sustaining connection with another male internee.

'Edited by Uwe’s daughter Jacquie Houlden and historian Seumas Spark, the diaries offer a fascinating insight into life in wartime internment. In depicting the barriers to homosexual and bisexual love in the 1940s, they reveal a new element to the Dunera story that has gone unexplored. Vivid and poignant, Shadowline is a powerful portrait of a man torn between his feelings and society’s expectations.'(Publication summary) 

1 A Venerable Wordsmith : Taking a Punt on Les Carlyon Seumas Spark , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 438 2021; (p. 30)

— Review of A Life in Words : Collected Writings from Gallipoli to the Melbourne Cup Les Carlyon , 2021 selected work essay column
'I guess every reviewer comes to a book with expectations, especially when the author’s reputation precedes him or her. On opening this collection, I knew that Les Carlyon (who died in 2019) wrote well. I remember my parents reading him in The Age and murmuring approval of his lyrical style and, sometimes, the content. I knew he loved horses, the track, and the punt. To me these were disappointments to overlook: I have hated horse racing since I was a kid driving around with my grandfather in his Datsun, windows up and the races on. My grandfather never wound down the windows, presumably so he could hear the call: perhaps it was the lack of fresh air that poisoned me against the sport. And I knew that Carlyon had written huge tomes on war and the Australian experience: Gallipoli (2001) and The Great War (2006) won acclaim, sold well, and left some military historians with reservations about his scholarship. My expectations, mostly, were realised. I sped through A Life in Words, encountering witty and whimsical delights along the way.' (Introduction)
1 Writing Dunera : Ken Inglis's Last Work Seumas Spark , 2020 single work biography
— Appears in: I Wonder : The Life and Work of Ken Inglis 2020;
1 3 y separately published work icon Dunera Lives : Profiles Ken Inglis , Bill Gammage , Seumas Spark , Jay Winter , Carol Bunyan , Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2020 23789574 2020 single work biography

'The story of the 'Dunera Boys' is an intrinsic part of the history of Australia in the Second World War and in its aftermath. The injustice these 2000 men suffered through British internment in camps at Hay, Tatura and Orange is well known. Less familiar is the tale of what happened to them afterwards. Following on from volume one Dunera Lives: A Visual History (2018), Dunera Lives: Profiles continues the saga in life stories.

'This second volume of Dunera Lives presents the voices, faces, and lives of 20 people, who, together with nearly 3000 other internees from Britain and Singapore, landed in Australia in 1940. All over the world there were Dunera lives, those of men and women who passed through the upheavals of the Second World War and survived to tell the tale. Here are some of their stories.

'A contribution to the history of Australia, to the history of migrants and migration, and to the history of human rights, these two volumes put in the public domain a story whose full dimensions and complexity have never been described.' (Publication summary)

1 6 y separately published work icon I Wonder : The Life and Work of Ken Inglis Peter Browne (editor), Seumas Spark (editor), Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2020 18306212 2020 anthology biography essay

'Ken Inglis was one of Australia’s most creative, wide-ranging and admired historians. During a scholarly career spanning nearly seven decades, his humane, questioning approach — summed up by the recurring query, ‘I wonder…’ — won him a large and appreciative audience. Whether he was writing about religion, the media, nationalism, the ‘civil religion’ of Anzac, a subject he made his own, or collaborating on monumental histories of Australia or the remarkable men aboard the Dunera, he brought wit, erudition and originality to the study of history. Alongside his history writing, he pioneered press criticism in Australia, contributed journalism to magazines and newspapers, and served as vice-chancellor of the fledgling University of Papua New Guinea. This collection of essays traces the life and work of this much-loved historian and observer of Australia life.' (Publication summary)

1 War Stories Seumas Spark , 2017 single work review essay
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 394 2017; (p. 48)

'First, a quibble. In the first paragraph of his introduction, John Connor writes that few Australians could ‘name a significant figure of the Australian Army’, John Monash and Simpson (and his donkey) aside. I am less sure. A generation after his death, Edward ‘Weary’ Dunlop remains a familiar name. Two of the past three governors-general, including the incumbent, served in the highest ranks of the army. The governor of New South Wales is David Hurley, another former general. David Morrison had not long retired as head of the army when he was named 2016 Australian of the Year. Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most highly decorated living soldier, is chairman of the National Australia Day Council. In recent years, Australians have moved closer to Americans in their veneration of all things military, and with this development the nation’s bravest and most senior soldiers spend more time in the public eye. The army does not want for attention in modern Australia.' (Introduction)

1 Ken Inglis and the Dunera : A Seventy-year History Seumas Spark , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Inside Story , December 2016;

'Among the speakers at last month’s conference at Monash University on the work of historian Ken Inglis was Seumas Spark, who is working with Ken and the American historian Jay Winter on a two-volume book about the Dunera boys' (Introduction)          

1 Filming War in the Pacific Seumas Spark , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , August vol. 12 no. 2 2015; (p. 253-254)

— Review of Parer's War Alison Nisselle , 2013 single work film/TV
1 Untitled Seumas Spark , 2008 single work review
— Appears in: Reviews in Australian Studies , vol. 3 no. 3 2008;

— Review of Arthur Blackburn, VC : An Australian Hero, His Men, and Their Two World Wars Andrew Faulkner , 2008 single work biography
1 [Review Essay] Well Done, Those Men : Memoirs of a Vietnam Veteran Seumas Spark , 2007 single work review
— Appears in: Reviews in Australian Studies , vol. 2 no. 5 2007;

— Review of Well Done, Those Men : Memoirs of a Vietnam Veteran Barry Heard , 2005 single work autobiography
1 Untitled Seumas Spark , 2006 single work review
— Appears in: Reviews in Australian Studies , vol. 1 no. 6 2006;

— Review of He's Not Coming Home : A Story of Love, Loss and Discovery in Rabaul During World War 2 Gillian Nikakis , 2005 single work autobiography
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