Phillip Deery Phillip Deery i(A21353 works by)
Also writes as: P. D.
Gender: Male
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1 Beyond the Red Shoe: Searching for Mrs Petrov Phillip Deery , Julie Kimber , 2024 single work biography
— Appears in: Australian Journal of Biography and History , no. 8 2024;

'A fictionalised account of the Petrov Affair begins with its most famous incident.
This occurred on the tarmac of Sydney’s Mascot airport on 19 April 1954:

Evdokia knew this crowd was here for her. They were hunting her. They were here to prevent her escaping through the terminal, onto the plane ... Her escorts had revolvers in their jackets. If it was Moscow’s instruction, they’d do away with her here ... She could not believe it, the number of people, the lights, the shadows ... Evdokia wanted to stop. She wanted to stop and turn and run. Zharkov at her elbow, insisting otherwise ... The crowd thought the men were dragging her, pushing her, physically compelling her to move. They swept towards them, shouting, appealing.

'This retelling barely approximates what happened on that dramatic evening. Certainly,
the iconic photograph (see Figure 1) capturing a vulnerable and anguished woman,
missing one shoe, being escorted by burly Soviet couriers towards the Moscow-
bound plane, has entered our historical memory. But, as to be expected, there is
a disjuncture between historical imagination and the archival record. The drama
of this event overshadows the complexity of negotiations and tactics used when the
plane reached Darwin. The truth of what happened then, behind the scenes, is still
opaque. A similar issue lies at the heart of our search for the truth about Evdokia
Petrov. We began with the intention of a conventional biographical portrait—one that
extended, but was still consistent with, previous studies. Instead, what we discovered
was that, in investigating the dialogue between truth and illusion, we entered a world
of deception and dissembling from which we emerged more uncertain than ever. This
article, then, is an exercise in biography as frustration. In part it is an exploration of
what is known about Evdokia. In tracing her history through her own words, through
Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), government and newspaper
reports, through oral history and through secondary studies, we highlight the ways
in which elements of her story unravel. We argue that there can be no certainty in its
retelling. Evdokia Petrov’s words and her portrayal by contemporaries demonstrate
that any attempt at biography is plagued by ambiguity.' 

(Introduction)

1 Labour Colleagues Phillip Deery , Julie Kimber , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: The Work of History : Writing for Stuart Macintyre 2022;
1 Review : Red Professor : The Cold War Life of Fred Rose Phillip Deery , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Journal of Politics and History , March vol. 62 no. 1 2016; (p. 144–145)

— Review of Red Professor : The Cold War Life of Fred Rose Peter Monteath , Valerie Munt , 2015 single work biography
1 Political Theatre and the State: Melbourne and Sydney, 1936-1953 Phillip Deery , Lisa Milner , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: History Australia , December vol. 12 no. 3 2015; (p. 113-136) The New Theatre : The People, Plays and Politics behind Australia's Radical Theatre 2022;
'For much of the twentieth century, branches of the New Theatre in Australia presented left-wing theatre within a culture that was resistant to their ideas. A novel mix of conventional theatre forms, experimental performative styles, agitational propaganda and Communist theories of 'art as a weapon' produced theatre that was responsive to international issues, infused with social comment, and oppositional in orientation. The larger Melbourne and Sydney branches of the New Theatre, on which this article focuses, attracted the attention of governments and security services anxious about the 'insidious' influence of left-wing workers' theatre. The article explores the various attempts to monitor, censor and silence the Melbourne and Sydney branches of New Theatre from 1936 to 1953, and suggests that the state circumscribed but did not cripple the groups' contribution to the development of a radical cultural activist tradition in Australia.' (Publication summary)
1 Book Notes P. D. , 2002 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Historical Studies , April vol. 33 no. 119 2002; (p. 230)

— Review of The Pram Factory : The Australian Performing Group Recollected Tim Robertson , 2001 single work criticism
1 Untitled Phillip Deery , 1993 single work review
— Appears in: Journal of Australian Studies , September no. 38 1993; (p. 81)

— Review of The World of Albert Facey J. B. Hirst , 1992 multi chapter work essay short story poetry
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