2006 Book Dispossession, dreams and diversity: Issues in Australian studiesCarter, David (2006). Dispossession, dreams and diversity: Issues in Australian studies. Frenchs Forest, Australia: Pearson Education. |
2021 Journal Article Thomas ‘Tom’ Andrew O’Regan FAHA 1956–2020Cunningham, Stuart, Turner, Graeme and Carter, David (2021). Thomas ‘Tom’ Andrew O’Regan FAHA 1956–2020. Media International Australia, 180 (1), 7-11. doi: 10.1177/1329878x211010781 |
2019 Book Chapter The writing professions during and after World War ICarter, David and Darian-Smith, Kate (2019). The writing professions during and after World War I. The First World War, The Universities and the Professions in Australia 1914-1939. (pp. 342-362) edited by Kate Darian-Smith and James Waghorne. Carlton, VIC, Australia: Melbourne University Press. |
2019 Book Chapter Fiction publishing in Australia, 2013-2017Carter, David (2019). Fiction publishing in Australia, 2013-2017. Publishing and culture. (pp. 341-358) edited by Dallas John Baker, Donna Lee Brien and Jen Webb. Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. |
2018 Journal Article The publishing ecosystems of contemporary australian genre fictionDriscoll, Beth, Fletcher, Lisa, Wilkins, Kim and Carter, David (2018). The publishing ecosystems of contemporary australian genre fiction. Creative Industries Journal, 11 (2), 203-221. doi: 10.1080/17510694.2018.1480851 |
2018 Journal Article Literary, but not too literary; joyous, but not jazzy: Triad magazine, antipodean modernity and the middlebrowCarter, David (2018). Literary, but not too literary; joyous, but not jazzy: Triad magazine, antipodean modernity and the middlebrow. Modernism-Modernity, 25 (2), 245-267. doi: 10.1353/mod.2018.0018 |
2018 Journal Article Rare books? The divided field of reading and book culture in contemporary AustraliaKelly, Michelle, Gayo, Modesto and Carter, David (2018). Rare books? The divided field of reading and book culture in contemporary Australia. Continuum, 32 (3), 1-14. doi: 10.1080/10304312.2018.1453463 |
2018 Journal Article 'How it Strikes a Contemporary': Modernism and Modernity in Australia, 1920s-1930sCarter, David (2018). 'How it Strikes a Contemporary': Modernism and Modernity in Australia, 1920s-1930s. Pacific and American Studies, 18, 65-79. |
2018 Book Chapter The book trade and the arts ecology: transnationalism and digitization in the Australian literary fieldCarter, David and Kelly, Michelle (2018). The book trade and the arts ecology: transnationalism and digitization in the Australian literary field. Making culture: commercialisation, transnationalism, and the state of 'nationing' in contemporary Australia. (pp. 15-27) edited by David Rowe, Graeme Turner and Emma Waterton. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. |
2018 Book Australian books and authors in the American marketplace 1840s–1940sCarter, David and Osborne, Roger (2018). Australian books and authors in the American marketplace 1840s–1940s. The University Of Sydney, N.S.W.: Sydney University Press. doi: 10.2307/j.ctv175p8 |
2017 Book Chapter Australian stories: books and reading in the nationCarter, David and Kelly, Michelle (2017). Australian stories: books and reading in the nation. Publishing means business: Australian perspectives. (pp. 147-181) edited by Aaron Mannion and Millicent Weber. Melbourne, Australia: Monash University Publishing. |
2017 Book Chapter Bush legends and pastoral landscapesCarter, David John (2017). Bush legends and pastoral landscapes. Teaching Australian and New Zealand literature. (pp. 42-54) edited by Nicholas Birns, Nicole Moore and Sarah Shieff. New York, NY United States: Modern Language Association of America. |
2017 Book Chapter The other empire: Australian books and American publishers in the late nineteenth centuryCarter, David (2017). The other empire: Australian books and American publishers in the late nineteenth century. The global histories of books: methods and practices. (pp. 47-72) edited by Elleke Boehmer, Rouven Kunstmann, Priyasha Mukhopadhyay and Asha Rogers. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-51334-8 |
2016 Journal Article The literary field and contemporary trade-book publishing in Australia: literary and genre fictionCarter, David (2016). The literary field and contemporary trade-book publishing in Australia: literary and genre fiction. Media International Australia, 158 (1), 48-57. doi: 10.1177/1329878X15622078 |
2016 Book Chapter Middlebrow book cultureCarter, David (2016). Middlebrow book culture. Routledge international handbook of the sociology of art and culture. (pp. 349-369) edited by Laurie Hanquinet and Mike Savage. London, United Kingdon: Routledge. |
2016 Book Chapter Beyond the Antipodes: Australian popular fiction in transnational networksCarter, David (2016). Beyond the Antipodes: Australian popular fiction in transnational networks. New directions in popular fiction: genre, distribution, reproduction. (pp. 349-370) edited by Ken Gelder. London, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1057/978-1-137-52346-4 |
2016 Book Chapter General fiction, genre fiction and literary fiction publishing 2000-13Carter, David John (2016). General fiction, genre fiction and literary fiction publishing 2000-13. The return of print? Contemporary Australian publishing. (pp. 1-25) edited by Aaron Mannion and Emmett Stimson. Clayton VIC, Australia: Monash University Publishing. doi: 10.26180/5f3c6e1362e47 |
2015 Journal Article What America also read: Australian historical fiction in the American marketplace, 1927-1948Carter, David (2015). What America also read: Australian historical fiction in the American marketplace, 1927-1948. Antipodes 29.2, 29 (2), 349-369. |
2015 Journal Article The conditions of fame: literary celebrity in Australia between the warsCarter, David (2015). The conditions of fame: literary celebrity in Australia between the wars. Journal of Modern Literature, 39 (1), 170-187. doi: 10.2979/jmodelite.39.1.170 |
2015 Journal Article Living with instrumentalism: the academic commitment to cultural diplomacyCarter, David (2015). Living with instrumentalism: the academic commitment to cultural diplomacy. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 21 (4), 478-493. doi: 10.1080/10286632.2015.1042470 |