Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
Associate Professor Stephen Carleton
Associate Professor

Stephen Carleton

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 68739

Overview

Background

Stephen is a Brisbane-based playwright and academic. His plays have been produced across Australia and won awards including the Griffin Theatre Award (2015) for The Turquoise Elephant, the Matilda Award for Best New Australian Play (2017) for Bastard Territory, and the Patrick White Playwrights’ Award (2005) and New Dramatists’ Award (2006) for Constance Drinkwater and the Final Days of Somerset. Those plays and others including musical Joh for PM (2017, with Paul Hodge), and The Narcissist (2007), have been shortlisted for a range of awards including the Patrick White Playwrights’ Award, the Queensland Premier’s Drama Award, Queensland Literary Awards (Drama), and two AWGIEs.

His main areas of theatre research at present are in c21st Australian playwriting, and the intersections between Gothic drama and Eco-criticism, where he has written the first two of a propsed trilogy of 'cli fi' plays. He has published on the Australian Gothic, and extended this area of interest into Ireland, the UK, the USA, Canada, South Africa and New Zealand. He has a background in Postcolonial drama, Australian Drama (from c19th melodramas to c21st playwriting), Spatial Inquiry (focussing on the Australian North), and Cultural Geography. He is also co-creator of the Cultural Atlas of Australia with his colleagues Prof. Jane Stadler and A/Prof. Peta Mitchell.

Availability

Associate Professor Stephen Carleton is:
Not available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, La Trobe University
  • Masters (Research) of Creative Writing, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy of Drama and Theatre Studies, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • Gothic drama and Eco-Criticism

    Specialised focus on 'cli fi' and the grotesque in relation to catastrophic climate change and its denial

  • Gothic drama and the postcolonial

    Specialised focuses on Australian and Irish plays, but extending into the US, Canada, South Africa and New Zealand.

  • Spatial Inquiry and Cultural Geography

    Specialised focus on the Australian North, and mythic Australian spaces

  • Australian Drama

    From c19th melodrama to c21st Australian playwriting

Research impacts

Stephen Carleton is a leading Australian playwright, being one of only a small handful to have won both national awards for new Australian playwriting: the Griffin Award, and the Patrick White Playwrights' Award. His plays have generated more than $2m in box office earnings, and played before audiences around the country. He received a 2010 ARC Discovery Grant with colleagues Jane Stadler and Peta Mitchell to undertake research towards producing a Cultural Atlas of Australia which mediates spaces in theatre , film and literature. It is an interdisciplinary research project that investigates the cultural and historical significance of location and landscape in Australian cinema, plays and novels.

Stephen's recent playwriting practice has moved into speculative fiction and 'cli fi' drama incorporating elements of the gothic, the grotesque and eco-criticism to examine catastrophic climate change and denialism. He has also conducted research into contemporary Gothic drama around the world. An Early Career Resarch Grant allowed him to conduct study into the Irish Gothic. His PhD thesis, entitled "Imagining and Performing an Australian Deep North", employed Spatial Inquiry and strands of contemporary cultural studies and theatre theory to explore the ways in which the Australian North has been constructed in theatre history from 1900 to the present day. Recent theatre productions include: New Babylon (2021), The Turquoise Elephant in Sydney and Darwin (2016 and 2018), musical Joh for PM with Paul Hodge in Brisbane (2017), and Bastard Territory in Brisbane (2016), Darwin and Cairns (2014). His seminal work, Constance Drinkwater and the Final Days of Somerset, sits on the senior drama Australian Gothic curriculum in Queensland.

Works

Search Professor Stephen Carleton’s works on UQ eSpace

51 works between 2002 and 2024

21 - 40 of 51 works

2016

Other Outputs

Bastard Territory

Carleton, Stephen (Playwright) (2016). Bastard Territory. South Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Queensland Theatre.

Bastard Territory

2016

Other Outputs

Bastard Territory

Carleton, Stephen (2016). Bastard Territory. Brisbane, Queensland: Playlab Press.

Bastard Territory

2016

Book

Imagined landscapes: geovisualizing Australian spatial narratives

Stadler, Jane, Mitchell, Peta and Carleton, Stephen (2016). Imagined landscapes: geovisualizing Australian spatial narratives. Bloomington, IN, United States: Indiana University Press.

Imagined landscapes: geovisualizing Australian spatial narratives

2016

Other Outputs

The turquoise elephant

Carleton, Stephen (2016). The turquoise elephant. Strawberry Hills, NSW Australia: Currency Press.

The turquoise elephant

2015

Conference Publication

Gothic melodramatic migrations from the London stage to Australia in the 1860s-1880s

Carleton, Stephen (2015). Gothic melodramatic migrations from the London stage to Australia in the 1860s-1880s. International Gothic Association 2015: Gothic Migrations, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 28 July-1 August 2015.

Gothic melodramatic migrations from the London stage to Australia in the 1860s-1880s

2015

Journal Article

Australian Gothic Drama: Mapping a Nation’s Trauma from Convicts to the Stolen Generation.

Carleton, Stephen (2015). Australian Gothic Drama: Mapping a Nation’s Trauma from Convicts to the Stolen Generation.. Australasian Drama Studies, 66 (1), 11-39.

Australian Gothic Drama: Mapping a Nation’s Trauma from Convicts to the Stolen Generation.

2014

Other Outputs

Hotel Beche de Mer

Carleton, Stephen (2014). Hotel Beche de Mer. Surfers Paradise, QLD, Australia: The Arts Centre Gold Coast.

Hotel Beche de Mer

2014

Other Outputs

Bastard territory

Carleton, Stephen (Playwright) (2014). Bastard territory. Darwin, NT, Australia; Cairns, QLD, Australia: Browns Mart Theatre, JUTE Theatre Company and Knock-em-Down Theatre.

Bastard territory

2014

Other Outputs

A cultural atlas of Australia: mediated spaces in film, literature, and theatre

Stadler, Jane, Mitchell, Peta and Carleton, Stephen (2014). A cultural atlas of Australia: mediated spaces in film, literature, and theatre. The University of Queensland. (Collection) doi: 10.14264/uql.2016.839

A cultural atlas of Australia: mediated spaces in film, literature, and theatre

2013

Book Chapter

Foreword

Carleton, Stephen (2013). Foreword. The Drovers by Louis Esson. (pp. 5-7) Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Playlab Press.

Foreword

2013

Book Chapter

"White Australia" in 1909: the background to the play and the two surviving scripts

Fotheringham, Richard and Carleton, Stephen (2013). "White Australia" in 1909: the background to the play and the two surviving scripts. White Australia or, the empty North. (pp. 6-16) edited by Richard Fotheringham. Brisbane, Australia: Playlab Press.

"White Australia" in 1909: the background to the play and the two surviving scripts

2013

Book Chapter

Foreword

Carleton, Stephen (2013). Foreword. Bag O' Marbles by Kathryn Ash. (pp. 5-7) Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Playlab Press.

Foreword

2013

Book Chapter

Rethinking regional theatre

Carleton, Stephen (2013). Rethinking regional theatre. Catching Australian theatre in the 2000s. (pp. 151-170) edited by Richard Fotheringham and James Smith. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi.

Rethinking regional theatre

2013

Book Chapter

Foreword

Carleton, Stephen (2013). Foreword. Men Without Wives by Henrietta Drake-Brockman. (pp. 5-8) Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Playlab Press.

Foreword

2013

Conference Publication

Mapping the Antipodes: Gothic theatre mutations in Australia

Carleton, Stephen (2013). Mapping the Antipodes: Gothic theatre mutations in Australia. Gothic Congress: Dark Latitudes, San Pedro, Costa Rica, 10-11 December 2013.

Mapping the Antipodes: Gothic theatre mutations in Australia

2012

Journal Article

Australian Gothic: theatre and the Northern turn

Carleton, Stephen (2012). Australian Gothic: theatre and the Northern turn. Australian Literary Studies, 27 (2), 51-67.

Australian Gothic: theatre and the Northern turn

2011

Other Outputs

Cultural atlas of Australia

Stadler, Jane, Mitchell, Peta and Carleton, Stephen (2011). Cultural atlas of Australia. St Lucia, QLD, Australia: The University of Queensland.

Cultural atlas of Australia

2011

Other Outputs

The gatecrasher

Carleton, Stephen (2011). The gatecrasher. I Will Kiss You in Four Places. (pp. 11-32) Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Playlab Press.

The gatecrasher

2009

Journal Article

Cinema and the Australian north: Tracking and troping regionally distinct landscapes via Baz Luhrmann's Australia

Carleton, Stephen (2009). Cinema and the Australian north: Tracking and troping regionally distinct landscapes via Baz Luhrmann's Australia. Metro, 163, 50-55.

Cinema and the Australian north: Tracking and troping regionally distinct landscapes via Baz Luhrmann's Australia

2009

Journal Article

Nick Enright: An Actor's Playwright

Carleton, Stephen (2009). Nick Enright: An Actor's Playwright. Theatre Research International, 34 (2), 216-217. doi: 10.1017/S0307883309004672

Nick Enright: An Actor's Playwright

Funding

Past funding

  • 2012
    Haunted Spaces and Haunted Pasts in the Contemporary Gothic Drama of Australia and Ireland
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    A Cultural Atlas of Australia: Mediated Spaces in Theatre, Film, and Literature
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2012
    Australian theatre that engages with South-East Asia and the Pacific
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Stephen Carleton is:
Not available for supervision

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Shifting Sands: Constructions of past, present, and future in contemporary Australian eco-gothic playwriting.

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Helen Marshall

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Gender Equality and the Cycle Play

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Joanne Tompkins

  • Doctor Philosophy

    As Long As You Keep It Quiet: A History of Queer and Queer-Coded Drama in Australia

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Margaret Henderson

  • Master Philosophy

    "Another turn of the screw": Re-Adapting Classic Texts for the Stage

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Ted Nannicelli

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Visual Feedback and Dramaturgy

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Emma Cole

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Families Bent Out Of Shape: Queer Adaptation Strategies For Family Drama

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Emma Cole

  • Doctor Philosophy

    "Policy as Choreographic act: How the AETT shaped a national dance identity in Australia"

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Chris Hay

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Chasing Changelings: Re-visioning Autism Aesthetic and Myth in Theatre

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Beck Wise, Dr Emma Cole

  • Master Philosophy

    Graham of Morphie and the Kelpie: The Australian Gothic and the Silencing of Female Characters

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Helen Marshall

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Associate Professor Stephen Carleton directly for media enquiries about:

  • Australian drama
  • Drama
  • Dramaturgy
  • Gothic theatre
  • Playwriting
  • Postcolonial theatre
  • Theatre

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au