AustLit logo

AustLit

Ann Standish Ann Standish i(A60019 works by)
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 8 y separately published work icon The Memoirs of a Young Bastard : The Diaries of Tim Burstall, November 1953 to December 1954 Tim Burstall , Carlton : Miegunyah Press , 2012 Z1841787 2012 single work diary

'Tim Burstall, the celebrated director of Stork, Alvin Purple and numerous other definitive "ocker" comedies, is credited with shaking the moribund Australian film industry out of its torpor. But long before that, in the early 1950s, he began keeping a diary to record the world of the group of "arties" and "intellectuals" he was living among in Eltham, then a rural area outside Melbourne, where cheap land was available for mudbrick houses and studios, and where suburban rigidities could be mercilessly flouted.

'Burstall was in his mid-twenties, with two young sons and an open marriage with his wife, Betty. Eager to become a writer, to go against the grain, he kept a record almost daily—of the parties and the talk in pubs and studios, about art and politics and sex, of Communist Party branch meetings and film societies, of political rallies and the first Herald Outdoor Art Show. Somehow, while holding down a public relations job in the Antarctic Division and juggling his love affairs and obsession with the beautiful, brainy Fay, he wrote 500 words almost every day. Betty, according to the diaries, kept the show on the road, feeding friends after the pub, milking goats and working in her pottery making bowls and mugs, which Tim sometimes decorated at weekends.

'These Memoirs of a Young Bastard, as Burstall dubbed himself and them, are among the most evocative Australian diaries of modern times. Burstall can write. He has an eye for the telling detail, an unerring ear for cant and pomposity and, most endearingly, an ability to mock himself—always from the perspective of a bloke of his generation.' (From the publisher's website.)

1 Creative History: Meandering Through Australian Stories Ann Standish , 2009 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December 2009 - January 2010 no. 317 2009; (p. 12-13)

— Review of Australians : Origins to Eureka : Volume 1 Thomas Keneally , 2009 single work prose
1 6 y separately published work icon Australia through Women's Eyes Ann Standish , North Melbourne Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing State Library of Victoria , 2008 Z1557423 2008 single work criticism

Throughout the nineteenth century, British women as diverse as Louisa Meredith, Marianne North and Beatrice Webb travelled to the Australian colonies and wrote about the emerging white civilization they found there. Some were visitors, others settlers, but all were fascinated by the possibilities of this 'new world'. Here, Australia is seen through the eyes of such women writers. It is a land of strange and un-English flora and fauna and of wondrously growing cities; a place where European cultural institutions were beginning to flourish - and where Indigenous culture was becoming invisible. (Publisher's blurb)

1 Making Tasmania Home: Louisa Meredith's Colonizing Prose Patricia Grimshaw , Ann Standish , 2007 single work criticism
— Appears in: Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies , vol. 28 no. 1 2007; (p. 1-17)
1 Literary Criticism Symposium Nathan Hollier , Noel Rowe , Ann Standish , Simon During , 2001 single work criticism
— Appears in: Overland , Summer no. 165 2001; (p. 74-82)
Four literary critics review and examine Authority and Influence and discuss the history and condition of Australian literary criticism in general.
1 Subtly Assured and Satisfying Ann Standish , 2001 single work review
— Appears in: Overland , Winter no. 163 2001; (p. 113)

— Review of Joy Nigel Featherstone , 2000 selected work short story
X