Dr Stephanie Green is an Australian writer and academic who has lectured in writing and literature at Griffith University. She was Deputy Head of School in the School of Humanities, Language and Social Sciences from 2015 to 2017 and currently convenes the Graduate Certificate of Creative and Professional Writing. Stephanie's research draws from and connects across the fields of creative writing, gender, fantasy and transmedia narrative. Her most recent publication titled 'The Killing Characters of Penny Dreadful' features in the  edited collection Serial Killers in Contemporary Television  (Robinson & Daigle 2022).

Join Dr Stephanie Green in conversation with Dr Valentina Maniacco  for the launch of the English edition of Tito Maniacco’s Mestri di mont.  Friday 29 July 2022, 6.00pm at Casa Italia, 26 Gray St New Farm.

CONTACT

Work: (07) 5552 8432

Email: stephanie.green@griffith.edu.au

QUALIFICATIONS

Doctor of Philosophy (The University of Western Australia)

Graduate Diploma Ed (University of Canberra)

Bachelor of Arts Hons (Australian National University)

Professional Membership

Executive committee member: Australasian Association of Writing Programs

Program Directorships

Graduate Certificate in Creative and Professional Writing: 2015 – ongoing

Bachelor of Arts: 2013-2015

Masters in Journalism and Mass Communications: 2009-2011

Research Grant

External Funding

Recipient of an International Research Network Grant from the Danish Independent Research Fund (DKK 1,041,408 / AUD$220,414 ), 'Imagining the Impossible: The Fantastic as Media Entertainment and Play' as part of a team of international researchers, which includes Dr Amanda Howell (GU). This project builds on and extends our ongoing collaborative work established through a Griffith/SDU Collaborative Travel Grant 2016, which funded research travel, seminar and workshops bringing A/Prof Rikke Schubart to Australia which led to development of the project ‘Genres of the Fantastic, Cross-Platform Entertainments and Transmedial Engagements’, resulting in two special journal issues, with Continuum and Refractory journals.

2016: International Collaborative research Travel Grant. Griffith/ University of Southern Denmark, (9,778). A/Prof Rikke Schubart (SDU); A/Prof Anita Nell Bech Albertsen (SDU); Dr Amanda Howell (Griffith University); Dr Stephanie Green (Griffith University).

2014: Romanticism and Writing: Legacies and Resistances. British and Enlightenment Research Network ($4000). Stephanie Green (Griffith University).

2014-2015: Romanticism and Writing: Legacies and Resistances. School of Humanities: JRE Funding ($1500). Stephanie Green (Griffith University).

2014: Romanticism and Writing: Legacies and Resistances. Griffith Centre for Cultural Research ($500). Stephanie Green (Griffith University).

1998-2000: ARC Large Grant Project. Chief Investigators: ‘Gender and the 19th Century Periodical Press’ School of English, UWA. Australian Research Council. ($300,000). Hilary Fraser and Judith Johnston with Stephanie Green (UWA)

2000: Research CI:  ARC Small Grant Project.  School of English, UWA. ‘Late Victorian Women Writers and the Press’. Australian Research Council. ($10,000). Stephanie Green (UWA)

Awards

Griffith University International Workshop Award

I am a co-recipient of a Griffith International Workshop Award 2018, which funded the Symposium Vampirical Transformations featuring a keynote address by A/Prof Stasiewicz and three external Australian scholars (with A/Prof MacLeod and Dr D Baker). We currently have a special Issue in development based on the Symposium papers, for submission to Continuum journal.

Hal Porter National Short Story Award for ‘The Edge: notes for a wiki-narrative’. Runner up. 2011. [pseud. Alexandra Xenophon] Published by Bairnsdale Regional Gallery.

Wildcare Tasmania Nature Writing Prize (essay) 2007 honourable mention for ‘The Golden Mountain’, published in: Island Magazine, Spring no. 110 2007; (p. 28-36)

Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards 2008  Best Drama Script for ‘Serpent’s Teeth’ 2006 (short story) published in Hecate, vol. 32 no. 2 2006; (p.193-197)

Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award 2007  (short story collection) long listed for Too Much, Too Soon Canberra: Pandanus Books, 2006

The Age Short Story Award 1991 for ‘Aunt Jessica and the Ostrich-tamer’ (short story)

Books

Green, Stephanie 2019 Breathing in Stormy Seasons: Selected Prose Poems, Recent Work Press (September).

Baker, David, Green, Stephanie and Agnieszka Stasiewicz-Bieńkowska (eds) 2017 Hospitality, Rape and Consent in Vampire Popular Culture. Palgrave Macmillan (22 November).

Green, Stephanie 2013 The Public Lives of Charlotte and Marie Stopes London: Pickering and Chatto.

Green, Stephanie 2006 Too Much Too Soon, ANU, Canberra: Pandanus Press.

Fraser, Hilary, Green, Stephanie, Johnston, Judith 2003 Gender and the Victorian Periodical Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Refereed Journal Articles

Green, Stephanie 2019 ‘The scent of things: travel and the traces of the past’ in ‘RE-mapping Travel Writing in the 21st century’ Text Journal Special Issue (forthcoming).

Green, Stephanie 2019 ‘Fantasy, Gender and Power in Jessica Jones’, Continuum 33 (2), 173-184.

Green, Stephanie 2017 ‘Lily Frankenstein: The Gothic New Woman in Penny Dreadful’ Special Issue: Transmedia Fictions. Refractory: A Journal of Entertainment Media. University of Melbourne. Vol 28. (June)

Abbasi, Hasti with Green, Stephanie 2017 ‘Writing and Romantic Exile’. Special Issue: ‘Romanticism and Contemporary Australian Writing: Legacies and Resistances’. TEXT Journal TEXT Journal (October).

Green, Stephanie 2016 ‘The Conditions of Recognition: Gothic Intimations in Andrew McGahan’s The White Earth’, Queensland Review Cambridge University Press (June). DOI: 10.1017/qre.2016.9

Green, Stephanie 2016 ‘The Public Life of Charlotte Stopes’,  Women’s Historical Review Taylor & Francis (16 Feb): 1-13.  DOI: 10.1080/09612025.2015.1131050

Green, Stephanie 2016 ‘Inclusions and Exclusions: considerations for a Stopes digital collection.’ Women’s History Review Special Issue: The Digital Humanities (July): 1-17. DOI: 10.1080/09612025.2016.1166884

Green, Stephanie 2012 ‘Desiring Dexter: The Pangs and Pleasures of Serial Killer Body Technique’, Continuum/Routledge, 26, 579-588.

Green, Stephanie 2012 ‘The Deflected Subject: ethics, objects and writing,’ Axon Journal/University of Canberra, 1, 1-7.

Green, Stephanie 2011 ‘Dexter Morgan’s Monstrous Origins’, Critical Studies in Television/Manchester University Press, 6, 22-35.

Green, Stephanie 2010 ‘The Rainbow Bridge’: writing and Teaching in a Regional Context’, Text: journal of writing and writing courses/Australian Association of Writing Programs, 14,22-35.

Green, Stephanie 2010 ‘Strange Dance Days’, Text: journal of writing and writing courses /Australian Association of Writing Programs, 14, 1-8.

Green, Stephanie 2009 ‘The Serious Mrs Stopes: Gender, Writing and Scholarship in Late-Victorian Britain’, Nineteenth Century Gender Studies/University of Kentucky, 5.3,1-16.

Green, Stephanie 2002 Wildflowers and Other Landscapes’ Transformations Journal, 1-10.

Green, Stephanie 1999. ‘Nature Was Strong in Him’: Spoiling the Empire Boy in George Meredith’s The

Book Chapter

Green, Stephanie 2022 'The Killing Characters of Penny Dreadful' in Brett Robinson and Christine Daigle (eds) Serial Killers in Contemporary Television: Familiar Monsters in Post-9/11 Culture. Canada. Routledge.

Green, Stephanie 2017 ‘Time and the Vampire’ in David Baker, Stephanie Green and Agnieszka Stasiewicz-Bieńkowska (eds). Hospitality, Rape and Consent in Vampire Popular Culture. London & New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Scholarly Introductions

Krauth, Nigel, Green, Stephanie and Stefan Jatschka 2019 ‘RE-mapping Travel Writing in the 21st century’ Text Journal Special Issue (forthcoming)

Baker, David, Stephanie Green (Griffith University, Australia) and Agnieszka Stasiewicz-Bieńkowska (Jagiellonian University, Poland) 2017 ‘Artful Courtship and Murderous Enjoyment: Introduction’ in David Baker, Stephanie Green and Agnieszka Stasiewicz-Bieńkowska (eds). Hospitality, Rape and Consent in Vampire Popular Culture. London & New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Hospitality, Rape and Consent in Vampire Popular Culture. Palgrave Macmillan (22 November).

Green, Stephanie with Paul Hetherington 2017 (eds). Introduction: Romanticism and Contemporary Australian Writing: Legacies and Resistances’. Special Issue Submission. Text Journal. Twelve scholarly papers by leading Australian scholars.

Green, Stephanie with Rikke Schubart, Amanda Howell and Anita Nell Bech Albertsen 2017 (eds).  ‘Introduction’.  Special Issue: ‘Identity and the Fantastic’. In Refractory: A Journal Of Entertainment Media. Vol 28 (June): 2017. Six scholarly papers by leading Australian scholars.

Refereed Conference Proceedings

Green Stephanie 2014 ‘Edge3: Multimodality, Dialogics and Fiction’, The Creative Manoeuvres: Making, Saying, Being. Refereed Proceedings of the 18th Conference of the Australasian Association of Writing Programs (March 2014).

Green Stephanie 2010 ‘Agencies of Voice: Teaching and Writing with the Short Stories of Uwem Akpan’. Strange Bedfellow or Perfect Partners. Refereed Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the Australasian Association of Writing Programs (March 2010).

Selected Short Creative Works

S. Green. 2017. Three Prose Poems. Untitled. Tract. Anthology. University of WA Press. Oct.

S. Green 2017. ‘To Start Again Is the Hardest Thing’. Prose poem. TEXT Journal. Special Issue Website Series . No. 46. [https://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/12944007]

S. Green. 2016. Prose poem. Untitled. Pulse. Anthology. Recent Work Press. University of Canberra, May.

S. Green. 2016. ‘Lily at the Sandhope Lunatic Asylum’. Short fiction. Bukker Tillibul 10 - Swinburne University Online Journal of Writing and Practice-led Research. ISSN 1835-0836. http://bukkertillibul.net/Text.html?VOL=10&INDEX=8

S. Green. Performance:  Extract from ‘Lily at the Sandhope Lunatic Asylum’. Performed at Australian Association of Writing Programs Conference, Swinburne University. Melbourne, Dec 2015.

S. Green.  Shadow Memories. A chapbook of selected Poetry published by Insula in association with an exhibition by James Yuncken The Drawing Room. Fortytwodownstairs, Melbourne. Sept 2015.

S. Green.  ‘Antidote’. (Creative Non-fiction Essay). Axon Journal. 1.2 (April) 2012.

S. Green. 2012 ‘The Edge: Notes for a wiki narrative’. Short Fiction. TEXT Journal (October) No. 15.

S. Green. 2012.  ‘The Mountain’. Poem, from ‘The Mountain’ poem cycle. Anthologized in The Green Fuse. Picaro Press, p. 91.

S. Green. 2012.  ‘The White Pillow’. Poem. Anthologized in The Green Fuse. Picaro Press, p. 26.

S. Green. 2010. ‘The Mountain’. Poem sequence arranged for music performance by composer and pianist Margaret Legge-Wilkinson with singer Angela Giblin for Artsong Australia in Wesley Centre, Canberra, 2 May) and again in Melbourne (St Stephen’s Church, RIchmond, 30 May).

S. Green. 2010.  ‘He Says Whitewater. Poem. Published in Island Magazine (Autumn) 120: pp. 106-107.

S. Green. 2007. ‘The Golden Mountain’ (Creative Non-fiction essay) Island Magazine , Spring No. 110: pp. 28-36.

S. Green. 2007. ‘Into the Light’. Short fiction - fantasy. Published in Slippery When Wet: A Collection of Australian Stories. No. 6: pp. 85-90.

S. Green. 2006. ‘Serpent's Teeth’ (short fiction) published in Hecate , vol. 32 no. 2; pp. 193-197.

S. Green. 1999. ‘The Order of Things’  (short fiction) Westerly 44:1: pp. 95-113.

S. Green. 1991 and 1993. ‘Lemons and Oranges’,  Social Alternatives , January vol. 9 no. 4 1991; (p. 44-46)’ and ANU Reporter,  26 May 1993.

S. Green. 1997. ‘Lemon Delicious’ (short fiction) Westerly 42.1; pp. 5-12

S. Green. 1991. ‘Aunt Jessica and the Ostrich-tamer’ (short fiction) The Age. Saturday Arts.

S. Green. 1991. ‘A fragment of the unsaid’ (Poem) with ‘The locust tree in flower’ (spoken word recording incorporating poems by Stephanie Green, William Carlos Williams and Gabriella Mistral). Voices in the Landscape. Canberra New Music Ensemble. Composer: Margaret Legge Wilkinson.

Selected Public Works

S. Green. 2014. ‘The Bohemians and La Boheme’: Big Ideas. Produced by Paul Barclay for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Recorded 30 August. This 1 hour event was recorded with a panel of commentators and performers and released on radio, ABC TV and online.

S.Green. 2014, Explainer: Game of Thrones, The Conversation April. http://theconversation.com/explainer-game-of-thrones-the-story-so-far-24321

S.Green. 2014, Books that Sizzle: Australian Literature and Summer, The Conversation January 2014. http://theconversation.com/australian-literature-and-summer-books-that-sizzle-21959

S. Green. 2012. ‘Small World’.  Big Ideas. ABC Radio recording of live panel discussion. Produced by Paul Barclay, with Melissa Lucashenko, Julianne Schultz, Kris Olsen and Patrick Holland. 1 October: https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/bigideas/2012-10-01/4279176

S. Green. 2012, Passengers of History, Egypt 2011, Griffith Review: Small World, Sept. Essay. https://griffithreview.com/articles/passengers-of-history/

S. Green, 2010, ‘The Domestic Flame’, 2010, Australian Book Review .

S. Green, 2010, ‘Robert Engwerda: Mosquito Creek’. Australian Book Review.

S. Green, 1988, Publish!: The ACT Arts Council Writers Handbook Arts Council of Australia ACT Division. Braddon.

Course Convenorships

7115LHS Advanced Creative Writing Research

7119HUM Writing the Contemporary World: creative writing and international contexts.

7118HUM Writing Creative Non-Fiction: auto/biography, narrative journalism and travel writing.

CWR312 Writing Gothic and Speculative Fiction (OUA)

LCI21 Irish Literature (OUA)

Supervisions

Stephanie supervises primarily in Creative Writing. Projects by her recent graduates include studies in writing urban nature, writing and exile, narrating gendered violence, book heritage culture and Asian Gothic folk narratives. Several of her candidates have won prizes and awards for their writing, and continue to publish widely in Australian and international venues. Stephanie is currently supervising projects in travel writing, gothic fiction and narrative journalism.