000 02889nam a2200253M 4500
001 on1099228025
003 OCoLC
005 20190529132823.0
008 190402s2019 nz 000 0 eng d
020 _a9781988531571
_qPaperback / softback
020 _a1988531578
035 _a(OCoLC)1099228025
040 _aNZLEP
_beng
_cNZLEP
082 _a920.0092
100 _aJohnson, Stephanie,
_923238
_c1961- editor.
245 1 0 _aWest Island: Five twentieth-century New Zealanders in Australia: 2019 /
_cStephanie Johnson.
260 _aDunedin :
_bOtago University Press ,
_c2019.
300 _a288 p. ;
_c230 x 150mm
500 _aPaperback / softback.
520 _aFive notable twentieth-century New Zealanders who made their lives in Australia are the subject of this fascinating biographical investigation by award-winning author Stephanie Johnson. Roland Wakelin, Dulcie Deamer, Jean Devanny, Douglas Stewart and Eric Baume had little in common in personality, proclivities and politics. Yet they all experienced fame and/or notoriety in the West Island while being largely forgotten in their country of origin. They also occasionally crossed paths in the course of eventful lives. The works of painter Roland Wakelin place him as a founder of Australias Modern Movement, while his modest and affable personality was the opposite of the stereotypical artist. Dulcie Deamer was a writer and libertine known for her leopardskin attire and associations with the larger-than-life characters of the Sydney bohemian set including the Witch of Kings Cross, fellow New Zealander Rosaleen Norton. The forthright feminism and creative integrity of novelist Jean Devanny led to bitter battles with the same communist movement she devoted decades of her life to. Douglas Stewart was one of the most famous Australian writers of his period. He was a long- term gatekeeper for Australian letters as the literary editor of the Bulletin, and then editor for publishers Angus and Robertson. Born into an unusual and unorthodox Jewish family, Eric Baume gained prominence in Australia as an early prototype of the modern- day shock jock and at one stage one of the countrys highest-earning media personalities and bestselling authors. A lifelong gambling addict, he died in debt. Stephanie Johnson restores these striking New Zealanders to our national narrative, engaging their life stories to illuminate the curious lacuna that exists at the heart of the complex relationship between the two nations. As a writer with strong connections to both countries, Johnson draws on her own experiences of life on both sides of the ditch in her reflections on the trans-Tasman diaspora and the subtle differences and cultural divide that set apart the two countries.
650 0 _944380
_aNew Zealanders
_zAustralia
_vBiography.
942 _2ddc
_cNZNONFIC
948 _hHELD BY NZWMT - 4 OTHER HOLDINGS
999 _c43192
_d43192