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Emmett Stinson Emmett Stinson i(A86454 works by) (a.k.a. Emmett Samuel Stinson; Emmett S. Stinson)
Born: Established: 1977 West Virginia,
c
United States of America (USA),
c
Americas,
;
Gender: Male
Visitor assertion Arrived in Australia: 2004
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Works By

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1 Last Letter to a Reader by Gerald Murnane Review – An Elegiac but Cantankerous Swan Song Emmett Stinson , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 16 November 2021;

— Review of Last Letter to a Reader Gerald Murnane , 2021 selected work criticism essay

'The Australian literary great bows out with a collection of essays that ruminate on his experience of reading all his books in order.'

1 Literary Criticism in Australia Emmett Stinson , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature 2020;
1 Retrospective Intention : The Implied Author and the Coherence of the Oeuvre in Border Districts and The Plains Emmett Stinson , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Gerald Murnane : Another World in This One 2020; (p. 45-62)
'This essay examines the dialogic relationship between Gerald Murnane’s final novel, Border Districts (2017), and his third published novel, The Plains (1982), to argue that Murnane’s late works enact a “retrospective intention” that revises the meaning of his earlier works. Murnane’s writings depict a complex relationship between author, intention, text and reader through the notion of the “implied author”, a figure that gives coherence to the total meaning of a work, while also being purely textual in nature. By comparing Wayne C. Booth’s influential definition of the implied author and Murnane’s use of the term, however, I argue that Murnane foregrounds and exploits its internal contradictions for generative purposes. The implied author functions similarly to what I will call retrospective intention.' (Introduction)
1 Short Story Collections, Cultural Value, and the Australian Market for Books Emmett Stinson , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Humanities Review , May no. 66 2020;

'This article employs a bibliometric dataset comprising forty years of Australian sole-authored short story collections to examine the degree to which non-economic values, such as cultural value and symbolic value, regulate cultural production in Australian book publishing. While short story collections may be an unexpected and oblique measure, the variable status of the sole-authored short story collection makes it a useful barometer for examining publishers’ investments in cultural forms of value, as opposed to commercial ones. This data suggests two findings that diverge from accounts of recent Australian literary production: (1) that the flowering of Australian short fiction in book-length form occurred slightly later than commonly noted (in the mid-1980s rather than the 1970s), and (2) that there has been a significant contemporary increase in the publishing of largely non-commercial short story collections since 2012. This second finding potentially problematises narratives of literary decline in Australian publishing. In particular, the re-emergence of the short story collection suggests that debates about the disaggregation of the literary field may be overstated, since this data potentially suggests a repolarisation of the field. Rather than reinscribing hierarchies of literary value, however, this repolarisation may simply reflect trends within readerly demographics that consume different kinds of texts.' (Publication abstract)

1 The Open Access Shift at UWA Publishing Is an Experiment Doomed to Fail Emmett Stinson , 2019 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 11 November 2019;

'There has been no shortage of bad news for Australia’s literary and publishing sector in the last year. Major literary journals Island and Overland have been defunded. Only 2.7% of Australia Council funding went to books and writing. The Chair in Australian Literature at University of Sydney is not being renewed.' (Introduction)

1 1 And the Winner Isn’t : On the Inherent Stupidity of Literary Prizes Emmett Stinson , 2019 single work column
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , August 2019;

'There has been no shortage of Australian critiques of literary prizes over the last few years. Giramondo’s Ivor Indyk argued that ‘no one is really suitable to be a judge of literary prizes’ and therefore ‘we should get rid of prizes altogether’. Terri-ann White, the director of University of Western Australia Publishing, announced in 2016 that the press would no longer enter its titles in literary awards, because ‘the expense (of entry fees, books and postage) and the time involved in . . . has exceeded our resources’. In what may be the most incisive and blistering recent critique, Maxine Beneba Clarke raised a series of pointed questions about prize-awarding practices, noting their ‘conservative shortlists’, the lack of diversity among awardees, and the absence of ‘a major book award for queer writing’.'  (Introduction)

1 Whose Byline Is It Anyway? Emmett Stinson , 2019 single work column
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , January 2019;

'With The Saturday Paper’s controversial experiment with pseudonymous book reviews coming to an end, what have we learned?' (Introduction)

1 What I’m Reading Emmett Stinson , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2018;
1 Bad Readers Emmett Stinson , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland , Winter no. 231 2018; (p. 22)

'I began university in 1996, attending what could be considered an ‘elite’ US institution. It was not Ivy League, but it was regularly listed among the top thirty universities in the country. The fee for one year was just over $33,000, including room and board. My family had been comfortably middle class for most of my childhood, but my father had quit his job and taken another at much lower pay while I was in high school. I was only able to attend the university because I received direct scholarships, alongside a complex array of government-subsidised loans and grants.'  (Introduction)

1 Friday Essay : The Remarkable, Prize-winning Rise of Our Small Publishers Emmett Stinson , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: The Conversation , 4 May 2018;

'It has been a big 12 months for Australian small publishers, who have swept what are arguably the three most important national literary awards. Sydney press Giramondo published Alexis Wright’s biography Tracker, winner of the 2018 Stella Prize; Melbourne’s Black Inc. published Ryan O’Neill’s Their Brilliant Careers, which won the 2017 Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Fiction; and Josephine Wilson’s Extinctions (University of Western Australia Publishing) won the 2017 Miles Franklin Literary Award.'  (Introduction)

1 Gerald Murnane : One of Australia's Greatest Writers You May Never Have Heard of Emmett Stinson , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: The Guardian Australia , 5 April 2018;

'The New York Times calls him one of the best English-language writers alive. So why isn’t he a household name?' 

1 The Ethics of Evaluation Emmett Stinson , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , May 2017;
'Book reviews can have a variety of functions: they might summarise part (but usually not all) of a book’s content, analyse this same content through political or ideological lenses, perform close textual readings, highlight recurrent themes and symbolism, situate a work within an author’s oeuvre, or provide essential historical, cultural, or social contexts. These, of course, are all important tasks that can enrich and broaden the reader’s understanding of a book; in this sense, book reviewing and academic literary criticism share many goals, even if their audiences and methods frequently differ.' (Introduction)
1 y separately published work icon The Return of Print? : Contemporary Australian Publishing Aaron Mannion (editor), Emmett Stinson (editor), Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2016 9941330 2016 anthology criticism

'This collection of essays by established and emerging scholars of Australian publishing examines the industry in the wake of both the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 and the various shocks and upheavals associated with the rise of ebooks. The authors here look beyond the digital, so prominent in many considerations of contemporary publishing, to questions of the book as a material artefact. As consumer trends increasingly suggest print will remain the central medium for the global publishing industry, it is asked if the messy state of affairs existing now, 'after' the digital revolution, can be described as 'post-digital'. With reference to a range of cultural, economic and technological issues, these essays examine how publishers are leveraging the possibilities afforded by multiple modes of dissemination. Contributors include David Carter, Sarah Couper, Mark Davis, Beth Driscoll, Ben Etheringtson, Lisa Fletcher, Sybil Nolan, Tracy O'Shaughnessy, Anne Richards, Emmett Stinson, and Kim Wilkins.' (Publication summary)

1 Protect Australian Stories! The Campaign against PIR Reform Emmett Stinson , 2016 single work column
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , May 2016;
1 Vulgar Rhetoric Emmett Stinson , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , March 2016;
1 Small Publishers and the Emerging Network of Australian Literary Prosumption Emmett Stinson , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Humanities Review , April / May no. 59 2016;

'This article examines recent debates around the decline of Australian literary production, focusing on the various methods used by Mark Davis, David Carter and Katherine Bode to quantify literary publishing activity. Following this analysis, the article surveys Australian literary production in 2012 in order to make four key claims: 1) a fundamental shift has occurred in the mediation of literary production, which is now principally undertaken by small and independent publishers; 2) this shift in mediation has profoundly affected the audience for most literary works, which now circulate amongst a smaller readership who have some stake in the production of literature as authors or mediators; 3) this contemporary form of literary ‘prosumption’ resembles the mode of literary production of the avant-garde as described by Pierre Bourdieu; 4) while this network of prosumption may appear insular, the complex social position of ‘authorship’, as noted by Bernard Lahire, means that literary culture brings together a network of agents who might otherwise remain unconnected.' (Publication abstract)

1 How Nice Is Too Nice? Australian Book Reviews and the ‘Compliment Sandwich’ Emmett Stinson , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Humanities Review , November no. 60 2016;
'This article responds to an ongoing public debate about whether Australian book reviewing is ‘too nice’, which started in the literary journal Kill Your Darlings in 2010 and has continued in other literary publications. It takes up Ben Etherington’s claim that ‘too nice’ reviewing is characterised by the ‘compliment sandwich’ in which critique is surrounded by mollifying praise. It offers a ‘distant reading’ of two years of fiction reviews in the Australian Book Review, applying a manual appraisal analysis to demonstrate that book reviews in Australia’s flagship reviewing publication do often adhere to the compliment-sandwich form. The article then returns to the question of ‘too nice’ reviewing, and applies a modified Bourdieusian analysis to examine how reviewing debates have served as proxies for larger disputes between institutions and interlocutors in the literary field.' (Introduction)
1 The Miles Franklin and the Small Press Emmett Stinson , 2016 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , August 2016; The Return of Print? : Contemporary Australian Publishing 2016;
1 Quiet Conversations in a Very Noisy Room : Tilting at Windmills Emmett Stinson , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , October 2015; The Australian Face : Essays from the Sydney Review of Books 2017; (p. 126-145)

— Review of Tilting at Windmills : The Literary Magazine in Australia, 1968-2012 Phillip Edmonds , 2015 single work criticism

'Phillip Edmonds’ short story, ‘The Soapbox’, published in the Griffith Review in 2008, is about an Australian named Warwick who moves to London and works at the Ministry of the Arts, where he takes ‘responsibility’ for the public forums at Speakers Corner — a task necessary because ‘the number of voluntary speakers at Hyde Park’ has ‘been dwindling, perhaps due to people getting older and the internet’. Warwick tries different strategies, but nothing draws audiences beyond groups of confused tourists. The ministry seems pleased with his efforts (‘the important thing’, he is told is ‘that things be seen to be done as much as being done’), but Warwick resigns in frustration and decides to return to Australia, though not before erecting a homemade soapbox in Hyde Park as a symbolic protest. The story ends with the narrator telling us that Warwick ‘stopped stressing about whether anyone was listening and gave up on being ashamed of daring to dream’.' (Introduction)

1 Remote Viewing Emmett Stinson , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , September 2014;

— Review of A Million Windows Gerald Murnane , 2014 single work novel
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