Sybil Nolan Sybil Nolan i(A90777 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 1 Robert Menzies’ Forgotten People and the Meaning of 1992 Sybil Nolan , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: History Australia , vol. 20 no. 3 2023; (p. 417-434)

'This article investigates the reception of Judith Brett’s landmark study, Robert Menzies’ Forgotten People, on its publication in 1992, a moment when many Australians living under neoliberal economic reform and recession were rethinking what it meant to be middle class. Brett argued that Menzies thought it meant individuals living the best lives they could, lives defined by independence and the possession of superior moral qualities. Her account resonated with contemporary Australian experience and remains highly influential. Yet within political history, reviews were mixed as traditionalists resisted the psychoanalytic theory Brett employed to understand Menzies’ public language. Her strategic defence of her interdisciplinary approach has ultimately helped to keep the idea of moral liberalism alive in political discourse.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Books Versus Screens : A Study of Australian Children’s Media Use During the COVID Pandemic Sybil Nolan , Katherine Day , Wonsun Shin , Wilfred Yang Wang , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Publishing Research Quarterly , December vol. 38 no. 4 2022; (p. 749 - 759)

'As children’s use of screens increased during the COVID pandemic, their reading of traditional books was affected, a national survey of Australian parents shows. The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Melbourne to compare young people’s use of screens and books in the pandemic. Their online survey of 513 primary caregivers of children aged seven to thirteen around Australia showed that tablet use flourished during the pandemic and that COVID lockdowns influenced book buying and library borrowing in consequential ways for publishing and literature. Many parents believed their children’s use of screens had come at the expense of book reading.' (Publication abstract)

1 The Transition to Book: Problems of Narrative Structure in Journalists' Manuscripts Sybil Nolan , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Return of Print? : Contemporary Australian Publishing 2016;
1 Review : David Syme : Man of The Age Sybil Nolan , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Historical Studies , vol. 46 no. 2 2015; (p. 331-332)

— Review of David Syme : Man of the Age Elizabeth Morrison , 2014 single work biography
1 Age Sybil Nolan , 2014 single work companion entry
— Appears in: A Companion to the Australian Media : A 2014; (p. 12-14)
1 True Believers Sybil Nolan , 2014 single work
— Appears in: Inside Story , May 2014;
1 An Unknown, an Interloper, a Feminist Sybil Nolan , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Inside Story , March 2014; Inside Story , May no. 20 2014; (p. 13)

— Review of Eilean Giblin : A Feminist between the Wars Patricia Clarke , 2013 single work biography

'Eilean Giblin touched much that was formative in twentieth-century Australia'

1 True Believers Sybil Nolan , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Inside Story , May 2014;

— Review of The Saturday Paper 2014 newspaper (449 issues)

'The Saturday Paper displays both the strengths and limitations of a primarily print-based publication, writes Sybil Nolan'

1 Sunshine State's Corrupt Legacy Sybil Nolan , 2013 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 27-28 April 2013; (p. 31) The Canberra Times , 25 April 2013; (p. 26) The Age , 27 April 2013; (p. 29)

— Review of Three Crooked Kings Matthew Condon , 2013 single work biography
1 Parallel Fates Sybil Nolan , Matthew Ricketson , 2013- single work criticism
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , February 2013;
'Structural challenges in newspaper publishing and their consequences for the book industry.'
1 Fairfax Adrift : the View from Sydney Sybil Nolan , 2013 single work review
— Appears in: Inside Story , August 2013;

— Review of Killing Fairfax : Packer, Murdoch and the Ultimate Revenge Pamela Williams , 2013 single work non-fiction

'Readers and journalists are mostly missing from two recent books about the troubles at Fairfax, writes Sybil Nolan'

1 Insight into 'The Age's' Heyday Sybil Nolan , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Journalism Review , December vol. 34 no. 1 2012; (p. 116-117)

— Review of Class Act : A Life of Creighton Burns John Tidey , 2012 single work biography
1 [Review] Tabloid Man: The Life and Times of Ezra Norton Sybil Nolan , 2009 single work review
— Appears in: Media International Australia , August no. 132 2009; (p. 145-146)

— Review of Tabloid Man : The Life and Times of Ezra Norton Sandra Hall , 2008 single work biography
1 Publishers Respond Michael Sabto , Robin Derricourt , Elizabeth Weiss , Sybil Nolan , Laki Sideris , 2005 single work column
— Appears in: Campus Bookseller & Publisher , August 2005; (p. 16-17)
Five publishers make individual responses to Leslie Cannold's article, 'Whither the Publisher?', on the control of scholarly publishing.
1 Tabloid Women Sybil Nolan , 1999 single work criticism
— Appears in: Meanjin , vol. 58 no. 2 1999; (p. 165-177)

''The whole woman' argues that for all women's hard-won advances, many of the problems that concerned second-wave feminists are still with us and, in some cases, have grown worse. This might be a powerful argument to someone who has been around long enough to compare then with now, but it isn't a winning line to run on a generation that has grown up with a revulsion towards radical feminism. You can draw a direct link from Greer to impressive younger writers like the Australian media feminist Catharine Lumby, whose book about tabloid culture, Gotcha, has recently been published. Lumby is the quintessential postmodern girl intellectual, an Arts- Law graduate who studied the postmodern thinkers as well as the law of torts. Not unlike the young Greer, she has had two overlapping careers, one as a journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald and the Bulletin, and the other as an academic at Macquarie and Sydney Universities. Her first book. 'Bad girls: the media, Sex and Feminism in the 90's' had strong affinities with The female eunuch. It touched on some similar issues, and its approach-Lumby described it as 'roam[ing] across traditional boundaries between academic theory, reportage and journalistic polemic''-was the same as Greer's a generation before. Its cover was a raunchy send-up of the famous female torso displayed on Greer's bestseller. The book was praised, deservedly, as one of the most readable feminist works published in Australia in a very long time.' (Publisher's summary)

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