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Bill Dunstone Bill Dunstone i(A11116 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 'Chaos' and 'Convergence' on the Western Australian Goldfields : The Politics of Performance in the 1890s Bill Dunstone , Helena Grehan , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , April no. 70 2017; (p. 35-56)
'This article adapts Doreen Massey's concept of space as a simultaneity and multiplicity of social relationships 'stretched out' over time, as a lens through which to consider the rapid emergence of a regional theatre sector during the 1890s mining boom on Western Australia's 'default frontier' Eastern Goldfields. In effect, we argue that while the locational surface of Eastern Goldfields theatre production was intensely local in its geographic and cultural specificities, it was also inalienably and reflexively affiliated with metropolitan centres of theatre production and consumption elsewhere in colonial Australia and the wider Anglopshere. We analyse the historical record of turn-of-the-twentieth-century Eastern Goldfields theatre performances to instantiate elements of 'chaos', by which Massey means 'happenstance juxtapositions' of cause and effect in theatre production within and beyond the region. At the same time, we argue that 'chaos' others itself as 'convergence', as local interests sought to consolidate regional control of the 'spatial ordering' of Goldfields theatre production and consumption.' (Publication abstract)
1 Making Maps 'Speak' : E-Mapping Performance on Western Australia's Coolgardie Goldfield, 1894-98 Helena Grehan , Bill Dunstone , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , April no. 62 2013; (p. 89-99)

'On the 'calm moonlight night' of 17 March 1897, Italian-born 'barrowman' and diarist James Balzano joined some 300 fellow 'diggers' in a circle around a bonfire near Dick Egan's tent at Red Hill Camp, now Kambalda East, on Western Australia's Coolgardie Goldfield for a St Patrick's Day concert given by residents of the camp. Balzano records that he found the cobbled-together programme of songs, recitations, solo instrumentais, and a 'Step Dance on a meat box' to be 'very good indeed'.

'This scratch entertainment at Red Hill is of interest as an experience of collective remembering and cultural colonisation among a temporary grouping of people on the move, most of them men. Such events were part of the process of inhabiting remote new goldfields locations in Western Australia that offered little or no built environment, civic infrastructure or cultural heritage to support settler performance, let alone the more basic requirements of life. The privations and physicality of life at the Red Hill camp, the movement of its prospectors from one 'rush' to another, together with the experiences and memories of those who had migrated from other countries or Australian colonies, were integral to the spirit of this St Patrick's Day entertainment. The conditions in which the medley of items was performed emphasised the performers' bodily energy and dexterity, while their voluntarism fostered a sense of community with the audience. The programme's dozen or so popular songs and recitations in English, opening with a hymn to 'The Golden West' and closing with 'God Save the Queen', summoned a moment of imagined community in a colonial hinterland that was alien to European bodies and indifferent to imperial culture. To borrow from James V. Wertsch," the performance embodied the kind of distributed social remembering that 'extends beyond the skin' and (significantly) can result in 'homogenous, complementary, or contested collective memory'. But if the occasion was one of remembering and community, it also registered a degree of cultural displacement and loss. The Red Hill entertainment can be understood in these ways as a double act of collective remembering and forgetting by culturally uprooted people looking for reassurance to a past now absent from their present, while anticipating the possibilities that had lured them to Red Hill in the first place.' (Author's introduction)

1 Dinkum Shakespeare? Perth, Empire and the Bard Bill Dunstone , 2001 single work criticism
— Appears in: O Brave New World 2001; (p. 163-179, Notes 275-276)
1 Culture and the Play in Merlinda Bobis' Ms Serena Serenata and Beaut, Luv! Bill Dunstone , 2000 single work criticism
— Appears in: Interactions : Essays on the Literature and Culture of the Asia-Pacific Region 2000; (p. 123-130)
1 `Dreams... Visions... Spells... Stoies': Representations and Identity in `Bon-Bons and Roses for Dolly' Bill Dunstone , 1995 single work criticism
— Appears in: Dorothy Hewett : Selected Critical Essays 1995; (p. 202-216)
1 Imperialist Discourses : Amateur Theatrical Performances in Perth to 1854 Bill Dunstone , 1993 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , October no. 23 1993; (p. 45-55)
1 Performance and Difference in Dorothy Hewett's `The Man from Mukinupin' Bill Dunstone , 1990 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Literatures Review , Summer South no. 19 1990; (p. 72-81)
1 form y separately published work icon Dorothy Hewett Bill Dunstone (interviewer), Sydney : University of Sydney Television Unit , 1986 Z494991 1986 single work film/TV interview

Dorothy Hewett looks back to her childhood influences and on the place of music, poetry, and art in her work.

1 Another Planet : Landscape as Metaphor in Western Australian Theatre Bill Dunstone , 1985 single work criticism
— Appears in: European Relations : Essays for Helen Watson-Williams 1985; (p. 67-79)
1 Four New Plays Bill Dunstone , 1982 single work criticism
— Appears in: Westerly , June vol. 27 no. 2 1982; (p. 63-66)
1 Untitled Bill Dunstone , 1980 single work review
— Appears in: Westerly , December vol. 25 no. 4 1980; (p. 92-94)

— Review of Garden Party Edgar Metcalfe , 1980 single work drama
1 Drama Bill Dunstone , 1979 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Literature of Western Australia 1979; (p. 185-213)
1 Untitled Bill Dunstone , 1979 single work review
— Appears in: Westerly , December vol. 24 no. 4 1979; (p. 85-87)

— Review of The Man from Mukinupin : A Musical Play in Two Acts Dorothy Hewett , 1979 single work musical theatre
1 Untitled Bill Dunstone , 1979 single work review
— Appears in: Artlook , vol. 5 no. 10 1979; (p. 7)

— Review of The Man from Mukinupin : A Musical Play in Two Acts Dorothy Hewett , 1979 single work musical theatre
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