• Sign in
  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • Archive
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Archive
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Submit
ALS logo
Access over 1,000 articles. Sign in or Subscribe
View latest articles

Norman Lindsay

  • Articles (4)
  • Contributors (4)
  • Related subjects (10)

Articles

  • Cecil Hadgraft
    Review of Norman Lindsay: The Embattled Olympian by John Hetherington

    Hetherington has been given a free hand; he depicts a complex and often exasperating man; and he does not shrink from anecdotes or odd traits…

    1 May 1974
  • John Docker
    Norman Lindsay’s ‘Creative Effort’: Manifesto for an Urban Intelligentsia

    Discusses Lindsay’s aesthetic theories, mainly in his crucial work Creative Effort, and suggests why these ideas were influential on a long list of other…

    1 May 1973
  • Elizabeth Webby
    Review of books by Hal Porter, Catherine Helen Spence, Douglas Stewart and Ric Throssell

    Webby reviews the following books:

    The Extra by Hal Porter (Thomas Nelson Australia Limited. Melbourne, 1975).

    An Autobiography by Catherine Helen Spence (W.K. Thomas &amp…

    1 October 1976
  • Penelope Nelson
    Under the Influence? Adam McCay: Journalist, Poet, Letter Writer and Influential Friend

    Discusses the friendships between McCay and Slessor and McCay and the Lindsays and examines McCay’s occasional verse. Includes reference to the influence of Adam McCay…

    1 October 2005

Contributors

  • John Docker
  • Cecil Hadgraft
  • Penelope Nelson
  • Elizabeth Webby

Related subjects

  • Kenneth Slessor
  • Literary influences
  • Aesthetics
  • Catherine Helen Spence
  • Friends & friendship
  • Hal Porter
  • Hugh McCrae
  • Jack Lindsay
  • Katharine Susannah Prichard
  • R.D. Fitzgerald
ALS logo
Subscribe now to access our archive of more than 1,000 essays on Australian literary culture and history, or recommend us to your library.
 
  • Search
  • Archive
  • Contributors
  • Contribute
  • About
  • Subscriptions
  • Manage your account
  • Terms of use
  • Contact