Rosalind Smith Rosalind Smith i(A68171 works by) (a.k.a. Rosalind Lewin Smith)
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 2 Cultures of Complaint : Protest and Redress in the Age of #Metoo Rosalind Smith , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Humanities Review , November no. 63 2018; (p. 172-179)

'We overhear a woman weeping by the side of a river, her tears mingling with its water and her voice echoing back to her to amplify her complaint. Caught up in grief and, occasionally, anger, she laments her unjust treatment by her male lover, even as she declares her unrequited love in the face of his abandonment (Kerrigan 14-23). In the late sixteenth century, when such complaints flourished, this abandonment could have devastating social and economic consequences for historical women’s lives, especially if the woman were pregnant. These chronicles of woe dramatised such consequences for both the unknown victims of assault and recognisable historical figures, in an early form of true crime writing. Yet this kind of female-voiced complaint was rarely a vehicle for women’s own protest or pursuit of redress. Early modern women’s complaints against love gone wrong were often written by men and framed by male narrators: they were the imagined responses of abused and abandoned women dramatised for the reader’s enjoyment and used to voice larger complaints against the times. Around these weeping figures formed sympathetic and generative communities, from the intimate publics who listened to the speaker’s lament within the text, to the broader communities of men and women who heard, read, copied, circulated or rewrote these complaints as their own.' (Introduction)

1 Lost in the Media : Evil Angels and Late Twentieth-Century Australian True Crime Rosalind Smith , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Telling Stories : Australian Life and Literature 1935–2012 2013; (p. 418-423)
1 Introduction: The Art of the Real Keri Glastonbury , Rosalind Smith , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 5 2009;
'This edited special issue of TEXT is derived from papers originally presented at The Art of the Real: National Creative Non-fiction Conference, organised by Kim Cheng Boey, Keri Glastonbury and Ros Smith of Newcastle University's Writing Cultures research group in May, 2008.' (Author's abstract)
1 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series no. 5 April 2009 Z1601978 2009 periodical issue Proceedings of the Art of the Real: National Creative Non-fiction Conference, Newcastle University, May 2008. Contents indexed selectively.
1 Dark Places: True Crime Writing in Australia Rosalind Smith , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , no. 8 2008; (p. 17-30)
'The international genre of true crime writing has been adapted and reinvented in specific ways in an Australian context, where true crime has a particular cultural resonance in rhetorics of nation. The settlement of Australia as a penal colony, the violent and unresolved history of relations between settler and Indigenous cultures, and our national mythmaking surrounding criminal figures highlight the centrality of true crime and its narration to formations of national identity. True crime is a popular and growing contemporary genre, typically concentrating upon certain events and figures as kinds of cultural flashpoints, and it also has a long history, from colonial narratives to early twentieth-century pulp fiction. Yet it has been critically neglected in almost all its Australian forms. This article begins to explore what constitutes true crime writing in Australia, and the ramifications that examining this genre has for changing constructions of nation, culture and history. It is particularly interested in the way in which the genre exploits a narrative tension between story and discourse to mobilise the power of myth, superstition and affect. This fuels the genre's exploration of cultural anxieties surrounding particular figures and events, and the paper uses the seminal text of Evil Angels to exemplify the narrative strategies at work in the genre and their effect on the terms and certainties of national formations.' (Author's abstract)
1 Forensic Voyeurism Rosalind Smith , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Australian Literary Review , December vol. 1 no. 4 2006; (p. 19)
Smith examines the rise of the true crime genre in the Australian setting. She includes Peter Carey's True History of the Kelly Gang and Helen Garner's The First Stone and Joe Cinque's Consolation in her overview.
1 Fine Dining in an Age of Fragile Order Rosalind Smith , 2003 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 22-23 March 2003; (p. 11)

— Review of The Point Marion Halligan , 2003 single work novel
1 Australie (Emily Manning) (1845-1890) Rosalind Smith , 2001 single work biography
— Appears in: Australian Literature, 1788-1914 2001; (p. 20-26)
1 Clara Morison: The Politics of Feminine Heterotopia Rosalind Smith , 2001 single work criticism
— Appears in: Southerly , vol. 61 no. 3 2001; (p. 40-51)
X