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Terrie Waddell Terrie Waddell i(7670526 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Filming Young Writers at Montsalvat : Intermediality and the Creative Potential of Performed Readings Terrie Waddell , Nicole Skeltys , 2021 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue , October no. 62 2021;
'The 2020 March-November coronavirus lockdown period in Melbourne (Australia) led to the suspension of many arts/entertainment programs, but it also provided an opportunity to launch innovative online projects. An informal partnership between Montsalvat artists’ colony and La Trobe University in Victoria, allowed the short story winners of La Trobe’s 2019 Young Writers’ Award to be read for film by professional stage and television actors: Anisha Senarate, Emily Taheny, Cal Wilson and Maude Davey. Initially proposed to Montsalvat as an online alternative to its community arts schedule during intermittent lockdown months, the Young Writers project was complete and uploaded in March 2021. The filmed stories, shot on the grounds and in the unique gothic styled buildings of Montsalvat, demonstrate the intermedial possibilities available to contemporary literary and performance-based pedagogy and practice. This article elaborates on the nature and value of this approach to storytelling and references the historical and contemporary nature of performed readings that informed the development of this project.' (Publication abstract)
1 The Spoken and Unspoken Nature of Child Abuse in the Miniseries Devil's Playground : The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, The Catholic Church and Television Drama in Australia Terrie Waddell , Timothy W. Jones , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Media International Australia , vol. 159 no. 1 2016; (p. 83-93)

'In a departure from Fred Schepisi’s film The Devil’s Playground, the television sequel Devil’s Playground focuses on the cultural impact of priest child abuse. It will be argued that the prolific mainstream media coverage of these crimes before the series was made, and anticipated during its screening, lent a form of permission to green light the production. In focusing on Case 28 of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, this article will draw attention to the problematic nature of dramatising priest abuse in mainstream Australian television. While victims have willingly voiced graphic details of the sexual violence they experienced as children, after decades of silence, it is as if networks and producers are only now awkwardly grappling with these uncomfortable realities. In the process of sanitising such abusive behaviour, they reduce the degree of cruelty that survivors are intent on communicating.'

Source: Sage Publishing.

1 Trickster-Infused Burlesque : Gender Play in the Betwixt and between Terrie Waddell , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , October no. 63 2013; (p. 96-110)
'In a flaunting of bodily 'dis'-play, female burlesque performers of the mid-nineteenth century elevated themselves to celebrity status. By upholding an ethos of irreverence that twisted and unsettled the more problematic ideals of 'womanliness', they provided strategies for their contemporary successors. Such presences continue to flourish in the dream-like shadows or liminal spaces of desire and trickster-infused play to prod audiences (consciously or unconsciously) into new ways of imagining - particularly in relation to the elusive and multidimensional concept of the feminine. The shape-shifting trickster figure is a ubiquitous presence in myth, literature, theatre and screen storytelling (as reworked myth). While it evades any conclusive definition, it's not difficult to recognise core features. The same applies to burlesque and its many manifestations. Like trickster, the form and content of the genre can be elusive, marginal, resilient and absurd - a web of play that in itself defies reason, but inspires much theorising and cultural reflection. It is in the spirit of this focus issue that the following interdisciplinary analysis will look both to and beyond traditional understandings of female-centred burlesque and its manipulation of the feminine. After a brief contextualising history, the emphasis will shift to consider of how this kind of entertainment can be thought of as a liminal experience steeped in trickster energy.' (Publication abstract)
1 Scrubbers : The 'Great Unwashed' of Australian Cinema Terrie Waddell , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: Womenvision : Women and the Moving Image in Australia 2003; (p. 183-195)
Examines the function of a particular type of female character in Australian cinema.
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