Diane Stubbings Diane Stubbings i(A84999 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Noni’s Grip : Driven by an Urge to Tell Stories Diane Stubbings , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 470 2024; (p. 56)

— Review of Dropping the Mask Noni Hazlehurst , 2024 single work autobiography

'In 1983, actor Noni Hazlehurst was invited to London by Robyn Archer to be part of Archer’s new cabaret Cut and Thrust. Hazlehurst, less than a decade out of acting school and having just been fêted in Cannes for her performance of Nora in the film adaptation of Helen Garner’s Monkey Grip (1982), was ‘thrilled to bits’.' (Introduction)

1 Getting under Her Skin Diane Stubbings , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 19-20 October 2024; (p. 15)

— Review of Things Will Calm Down Soon Zoë Foster Blake , 2024 single work novel
1 Violence and Desire : Echoing the Australian Gothic Diane Stubbings , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 467 2024; (p. 28)

— Review of The Echoes Evie Wyld , 2024 single work novel

'When we first meet Max in Evie Wyld’s The Echoes, he is dead. He does not believe in ghosts, he tells us, yet that it precisely what he is: ‘a transparent central nervous system floating about like a jellyfish’. Max lingers in the house he shared with his partner, Hannah. He tries to make his presence felt, to signal to Hannah that he is still there, but he lacks any supernatural ability. Hannah moves on with her life, and all Max can do is ‘watch as the flat becomes the home of others – the moths, the spiders, the silverfish, the dust motes and … the leftovers of the dead’.' (Introduction)

1 ‘We, the Tamponauts’ : Lurching between Lyricism and Farce Diane Stubbings , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 465 2024; (p. 24)

— Review of Only the Astronauts Ceridwen Dovey , 2024 selected work short story
'In late 1999, NASA announced that its Mars Climate Orbiter, a multi-million-dollar robot probe designed to study the weather and climate of Mars, was lost somewhere in space. The craft had failed to manoeuvre into its optimal orbit, ending either on a course towards the sun or in a fatal collision with the red planet. Investigations uncovered the source of the blunder: one team working on the orbiter had been using metric measurements, another team had been using imperial.' (Introduction)
1 The Less Brilliant Life of Stella’s Sister Diane Stubbings , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 17 February 2024; (p. 14)

— Review of My Brilliant Sister Amy Brown , 2024 single work novel
1 The Problematic Poet Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 11-12 November 2023; (p. 17)

— Review of Her Sunburnt Country : The Extraordinary Literary Life of Dorothea Mackellar Deborah FitzGerald , 2023 single work biography
1 ‘If the Story Has Holes’ : A Trite Adaptation of an Intense Play Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 460 2023; (p. 38)

— Review of Prima Facie Suzie Miller , 2023 single work novel

'Suzie Miller’s play Prima Facie is one of Australia’s most celebrated literary exports of recent years. After an award-winning run of performances in Australia, a production helmed by Killing Eve star Jodie Comer triumphed in London’s West End and on Broadway, garnering deserved accolades for Comer as well as a coveted Olivier Award for Best New Play in 2023.' (Introduction)          

1 Interdependence : Three New Novels Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 456 2023; (p. 34)

— Review of Feast Emily O'Grady , 2023 single work novel ; Missing Pieces Jennifer MacKenzie Dunbar , 2023 single work novel ; The Art of Breaking Ice Rachael Mead , 2023 single work novel

'British sculptor Barbara Hepworth wrote that ‘there is no landscape without the human figure’. Similarly, there is no human without the landscape in which they are situated, human and landscape mutually shaping, resisting and defining the other.

'Three new Australian novels probe this interdependence, each of them concerned with the historical forces that have silenced and confined women, and each of them testing the capacity of their female characters to assert their stories, their selfhood, in the face of a hostile and unfamiliar landscape. Critically, what differentiates the novels is the degree to which their authors discover within these environments a similitude with their characters’ emotional struggle, the landscape not merely adorning the narrative but becoming essential to it.'(Introduction)

1 'Inside My Own Flesh' : The Everyday Horrors of Identity Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 454 2023; (p. 22)

— Review of Fat Girl Dancing Krissy Kneen , 2023 single work autobiography

'In previous memoirs, Brisbane-based writer Kris Kneen has examined their life through the lens of their sexuality (Affection, 2009) and their family history (The Three Burials of Lotty Kneen, 2021). In Fat Girl Dancing, Kneen’s lens is their body, specifically the body of a ‘short, fat, ageing woman’.' (Introduction)

1 Prima Facie : The Return of the Griffin Production Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 451 2023; (p. 65-66)

— Review of Prima Facie Suzie Miller , 2019 single work drama

'Since first being produced at Sydney’s Griffin Theatre in 2019, Suzie Miller’s play Prima Facie – a legal drama about consent and sexual violence – has become something of a phenomenon. Awarded Griffin Theatre’s playwriting prize in 2018, the subsequent production was enthusiastically received by audiences and critics alike. A 2022 West End production – propelled by the star power of Killing Eve’s Jodie Comer – garnered international acclaim, the National Theatre’s live screening of the production becoming one of 2022’s highest grossing British films. In 2023, the West End production moves to Broadway, while in Melbourne, the Melbourne Theatre Company’s six-week remounting of the original Griffin production – the production reviewed here – sold out before its first performance. If that wasn’t enough, a screen adaptation of the play is in the works, so too a novel, both helmed by Miller.'  (Introduction)

1 Man on a Mission Diane Stubbings , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 7 January 2023; (p. 15)

— Review of The Passion of Private White Don Watson , 2022 single work biography
1 The Perfect Bat : That Rarity, a Cricket Novel Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 449 2022; (p. 44)

— Review of Willowman Inga Simpson , 2022 single work novel

'In American culture, the baseball novel is virtually a genre unto itself, baseball offering a metaphor through which the American dream – the rise and fall and rise again of unlikely heroes – might be interrogated. The prologue of Don DeLillo’s Underworld (1997) offers a stunning example: within all the noise and spectacle of a baseball final an entire nation, as it teeters on the edge of the atomic age, is apprehended.' (Introduction) 

1 Applying a Cancer Model to the Generation of Writing for Performance : Finding (Creative) Life in Death Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , vol. 26 no. 2 2022;
'This paper outlines the creative experiment that led to the composition of Self Portrait / In Cross-Sections / With Bird, writing designed for theatrical performance. The paper sets this experiment within a critical framework that theorises a textual system. The textual system utilises the organismic dynamics of systems biology to delineate the dwelling within and shaping of imaginative spaces that results from the act of writing. Using practice-based research, the experiment seeks to investigate how biological processes might be used to generate innovations in dramatic form by analysing the implementation of one distinct biological process – the generation and proliferation of cancer. Specifically, by applying a model of composition derived from cancer biology to Shakespeare’s Hamlet, it is theorised that a dramaturgy essentially cancerous in nature might emerge. A cancerous mode of composition is realised through the transcription or copying of a foundational Hamlet text, a process which models DNA replication and which allows for a proliferation of mutation errors. The rapid and unchecked accumulation of transcription errors simulates the destructive energy of cancer, embodying the tension between chaos and order by which cancer is characterised. What emerges from the experiment are insights into the relationship between (creative) life and death within a cancerous mode of creative composition. By extrapolating from cancer to biological processes more broadly, the paper argues that a biological mode of composition – one which is alert to the inherent energy of the textual system – can enhance our understanding of the mutual emergence of character, author and text.'(Publication abstract)
1 1 Self Portrait / in Cross-sections / with Bird : A Monologue Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work drama
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 19 no. 4 2022; (p. 478-490)
'Self Portrait / In Cross-Sections / With Bird is a performance text that evolved from my experimentation with biologically driven dramaturgies. In this experiment, cancer biology was utilised as a dramaturgical model. Applied to Hamlet, the writing employed iterative techniques (for example the Microsoft Word dictation function) that favoured the accumulation of error while suppressing authorial imposition of form, structure and meaning on the emergent text. The aim of the experiment was to generate a text that, like cancer, was inclining away from order and towards ‘the inner edge of chaos’ (Sigston, Elizabeth A.W. & Bryan R.G. Williams. 2017. ‘An Emergence Framework of Carcinogenesis’. Frontiers in Oncology: Cancer Genetics 7: 198,' 

(Publication abstract)

1 Dismantled Lives : Gail Jones’s Elegant New Novel Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 448 2022; (p. 37-38)

— Review of Salonika Burning Gail Jones , 2022 single work novel

'In 1917, at the height of World War I, a fire destroyed the Greek city of Salonika (Thessaloniki), a staging post for Allied troops. The centre of an ‘Ottoman polyglot culture’, Salonika was at the time home to large numbers of refugees, many of them Jewish and Roma. It was in one of the refugee hovels that the fire started, an ember from a makeshift stove igniting a bundle of straw. From that single ember grew an inferno that burned for thirty-two hours, obliterating three-quarters of the city and leaving 70,000 people – by some estimates half the population – homeless.' (Introduction)

1 Jewel behind the Crown Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 1 October 2022; (p. 15)

— Review of The Ninth Life of a Diamond Miner : A Memoir Grace Tame , 2022 single work autobiography
1 Death Reveals Testing Lives Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 10 September 2022; (p. 16)

— Review of All That’s Left Unsaid Tracey Lien , 2022 single work novel
1 Preaching to the Converted : An Insipid New Play from Suzie Miller Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 446 2022; (p. 61)

— Review of Anna K. Suzie Miller , 2022 single work drama

'Australian playwright Suzie Miller, a mainstay of independent stages both in Australia and overseas, is having something of a breakthrough year. Two of Miller’s play are having their mainstage premières – Anna K and RBG, Miller’s ode to American jurist Ruth Bader Ginsberg (Sydney Theatre Company, October–December) – and her Griffin-award-winning play Prima Facie (2019) has been a sell-out smash in London’s West End and broadcast around the world as part of the prestigious NT Live initiative of Britain’s National Theatre. Other productions of Prima Facie, including a season on Broadway and a possible film version, are also in the works, and deservedly so.'(Introduction)

1 Striking Take on Slices of Time Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 9 July 2022; (p. 14)

— Review of Blue Hour Sarah Schmidt , 2022 single work novel
1 Delible Impressions : Liberating Daisy Simmons Diane Stubbings , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , July no. 444 2022; (p. 38)

— Review of Daisy and Woolf Michelle Cahill , 2022 single work novel

'Daisy Simmons – twenty-four years old, the wife of a major in the Indian Army, mother of two children, ‘dark [and] adorably pretty’ – is an ephemeral presence in Virginia Woolf’s fourth novel, Mrs Dalloway (1925). Clarissa Dalloway’s former lover, Peter Walsh, has travelled to London from India to secure a divorce so that he might marry Daisy. From a mere handful of references, we are able to glean the wavering nature of Peter’s devotion to Daisy and his suspicion that she will, as Woolf writes, ‘look ordinary beside Clarissa’.' (Introduction)   

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