Rebecca Johinke Rebecca Johinke i(A15612 works by)
Born: Established: 1963 Maitland, Maitland area, Hunter Valley, Newcastle - Hunter Valley area, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 Strategic Silence : Furiosa’s Silence in the New Mad Max Speaks Volumes about Women’s Agency Rebecca Johinke , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 29 May 2024;

— Review of Mad Max : Furiosa Nico Lathouris , George Miller , 2024 single work film/TV
1 Comatose "Vegetable" or Supercrip? Disability and Immobility in Patrick Rebecca Johinke , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , vol. 36 no. 1 2023; (p. 64-77)

'This article locates a number of 1970s Australian horror films in relation to British and American biomedical horror films featuring characters with disability who are gifted with telekinesis (making them "supercrips") and characters who are in a coma and labeled "vegetables." It employs scholarship by Paul Longmore, Matthew Norden, Angela Smith, Paul Darke, Robert Cettl, Sami Schalk, and others to interrogate how Australian genre film represents disability on-screen. An argument is made that while Ozploitation films like The Cars That Ate Paris (1974) and the first Mad Max film (1979) center on the car and mobility in Australian culture, Richard Franklin's Patrick (1978) draws attention to masculinity, immobility, and disability. Tapping into tropes about "monstrous" disabled others, Franklin creates a memorable disabled protagonist who evokes fear and dread via his telekinetic powers while also drawing attention to the plight of patients who are the victims of medical malpractice. A hyperbolic 2013 remake directed by Mark Hartley also explores the theme of masculinity and mobility and further exploits the Oedipal theme and the cure-or-kill trope. Both the original and the adaptation, this article argues, mine horror stereotypes about disability while also creating a character who is powerful rather than a passive object of pity.' (Publication abstract)

1 y separately published work icon Queens of Print : Interviews with Australia’s Iconic Women’s Magazine Editors Rebecca Johinke (interviewer), Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2019 18424466 2019 anthology interview

' For fifty years our most powerful popular culture influencers have been the high-powered editors of mass-market women’s magazines like The Australian Women’s Weekly, Woman’s Day, New Idea and the now defunct Dolly, Cleo and Cosmopolitan. It is difficult to overstate the influence that these women have had in shaping popular ideas and attitudes, feminism, and femininity in Australia via the pages of their magazines. In these interviews, they describe their lives and careers in a medium that is part of our publishing heritage.

'Queens of Print is a tribute to the most influential and iconic women in Australian women’s magazines. It is a snapshot of a rapidly changing industry where print is supposedly dead, and media have been disrupted. This book looks back, but also forward to consider what a magazine might be and what a magazine editor might do in future decades.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 A New Audience for Justine Ettler’s The River Ophelia : In Conversation with the Author Rebecca Johinke (interviewer), 2018 single work interview
— Appears in: TEXT : Journal of Writing and Writing Courses , April vol. 22 no. 1 2018;

'This article, in the form of a conversation between novelist Justine Ettler and literary and cultural studies scholar Rebecca Johinke, looks back at the reception of the Australian novel The River Ophelia in 1995. It also looks forward to speculate how audiences may read the novel in 2018 and beyond, given that in October 2017 it was re-released in e-book format with a new Author’s Note and Introduction (Ettler 2017a). The River Ophelia was a publishing sensation in Australia in the mid-90s as it describes sadistic and masochistic sex and domestic violence. Due to early reviews and the way it was marketed, it was labelled as ‘dirty realism’ or ‘grunge’. In this article, the authors argue for a re-appraisal of the text as a feminist parody and as a highly intertextual postmodern work. In and through their conversation, Johinke and Ettler reveal the extent to which genre confusion, and the question of what is and isn’t ‘real’ dominated the reception of the text at the time of its initial release, and how the intentional fallacy in cases where an author is conflated with a character can be adopted unselfconsciously, and indeed manipulated by, publishers and critics in the marketplace. In light of recent feminist activism around domestic violence and sexual abuse, such as the #MeToo campaign, the authors also discuss the depiction of domestic violence in The River Ophelia, and how certain representations of sex and female desire might play out in representations of abusive relationships. The question of what is and is not erotic, pornographic, or romantic literature is also discussed, both in relation to The River Ophelia, and in relation to several other controversial texts that have been published since its first release.' (Publication abstract)

1 Nick Cave’s The Death of Bunny Munro : Misogynistic Trash, Scatological Rhetoric, or an Ode to Valerie Solanas’ SCUM Manifesto? Rebecca Johinke , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Journal of the European Association for Studies on Australia , vol. 8 no. 1 2017; (p. 17-30)

'This paper interrogates the links between Nick Cave’s The Death of Bunny Munro and Valerie Solanas’ SCUM Manifesto. It starts by situating Cave’s writing in relation to his status as an auteur, examines discourses of rock music and the murder ballad, before providing a close reading of misogynistic scenes in the novel. It offers several ways to read the novel and questions whether it can be labelled a parody, satire, or as scatological rhetoric. It concludes by drawing the discussion back to aesthetics and the intersection of literature and music in the audio book version of Bunny Munro and Cave’s success as a salesman.' (Publication abstract)

1 Magazine Studies : Pedagogy and Practice in a Nascent Field Megan le Masurier , Rebecca Johinke , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 25 2014;
1 Introducing Australasian Magazines : New Perspectives on Writing and Publishing Rosemary Williamson , Rebecca Johinke , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 25 2014;
1 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series Australasian Magazines : New Perspectives on Writing and Publishing no. 25 April Rosemary Williamson (editor), Rebecca Johinke (editor), 2014 7353629 2014 periodical issue
1 Uncanny Carnage in Peter Weir’s ‘The Cars That Ate Paris’ Rebecca Johinke , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sydney Studies in English , vol. 36 no. 2010;
'This article examines Australia's first car crash film: Peter Weir's 'The Cars That Ate Paris' (1974). An example of Australian Gothic cinema, the film's dark humour and onscreen carnage acts as a destabilising rhetorical strategy. Automobiles operate as a remarkably flexible organising metaphor in the film where they act as both technological storks and agents of death. This essay interrogates the way that Weir aligns immobile crashed cars with Parisian/Australian culture and with liminal male bodies. It argues that the characters and cars are manifested as uncanny hybrids with both zoomorphic and anthropomorphic qualities. Weir parodies many of the myths about Australia and Australians in this film and in doing so he encourages viewers to consider constructions of nationality and identity.' (Author's abstract)
1 Not Quite Mad Max : Brian Trenchard-Smith's Dead End Drive-In Rebecca Johinke , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: Studies in Australasian Cinema , vol. 3 no. 3 2009; (p. 309-320)
'This article suggests that Dead End Drive-In (1986), Brian Trenchard-Smith's little-known Ozploitation film, deserves reconsideration from Australasian film scholars because it offers a valuable contribution to discussions about Australian masculinity, car culture, phobic narratives and the White Australia Policy. It is argued that the drive-in as detention centre foreshadows later Australian anxieties about immigration and border protection. Clearly a 'phobic narrative' full of 'white panic' (Morris, 1989, 1998), it exhibits many of the anxieties about Australians and 'auto-immobility' that Catherine Simpson (2006) discusses, and fits neatly into Tranter's (2003) discussion of cars and governance and Bode's (2006a) arguments about whiteness and Australian masculinity in crisis.' (Author's abstract)
1 [Review] Black Tide Rebecca Johinke , 2004 single work review
— Appears in: JAS Review of Books , July no. 25 2004;

— Review of Black Tide Peter Temple , 1999 single work novel
1 Misogyny, Muscles and Machines : Cars and Masculinity in Australian Literature Rebecca Johinke , 2002 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Studies , Winter vol. 15 no. 2 2002; (p. 95-111) Contemporary Issues in Australian Literature 2002; (p. 95-111)
Rebecca Johinke reads Peter Carey's short story 'Crabs' for 'insight into the self-defeating pursuit of normative masculinities in the Australian car culture' (95).
1 Manifestations of Masculinities : Mad Max and the Lure of the Forbidden Zone Rebecca Johinke , 2001 single work criticism
— Appears in: Journal of Australian Studies , no. 67 2001; (p. 118-125)

'Max Rockatansky is both straight and the best driver on the roads, and the villains in Mad Max and Mad Max 2 are gay motorcyclists. The demonisation of bikies and homosexuals in the two films is an interesting trope—all the more so because it has passed almost without comment or debate. George Miller' pits Max, the heroic heterosexual cop against the homosexual 'baddies' in the Toecutter's gang and Lord Humungus' tribe. After the death of his best friend, wife and son, Max is repeatedly drawn into the unknown and unlawful world ofthe bikies. As agents of death heralding the coming of the apocalypse, the bikies are exiled to the Forbidden Zone and are manifested as both queer and dangerous. Max fords the bikies worthy and proficient rivals who ooze a tough and extremely muscular masculinity. This article examines Max's quest to exterminate the rogue bikies and how Max's body becomes a contested site which both propels the narrative and offers itself up to mutilation and the gaze.'

Source: Abstract.

1 Bill's Ut(e)opia Rebecca Johinke , 1999 single work short story
— Appears in: Karrinyup Writing Collection , vol. 3 no. 1999;
1 Mrs Brown Rebecca Johinke , 1999 single work poetry
— Appears in: No Strings Attached : A Poetry Anthology 1999; (p. 12)
1 Just Drive i "Phase One-- Preparation", Rebecca Johinke , 1999 single work poetry
— Appears in: Journal of Australian Studies , no. 62 1999; (p. 111-112)
1 Stars in my Eyes Rebecca Johinke , 1998 single work short story
— Appears in: First Flights : Flinders Writers Test Their Wings : An Anthology of Creative Writing 1998; (p. 55)
1 Stopping All Stations Rebecca Johinke , 1996 single work poetry
— Appears in: Wasted Ink 1996; (p. 30)
X