Jess Dyce
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Jessie Reid Dyce (1911 – 1997) Also known as J. R. Dyce or Jess Dyce, was an academic and poet from Eastwood, New South Wales, then Newcastle, New South Wales Australia.
Biography
Jess Dyce was born in October 1911 in Eastwood, New South Wales Australia.
In her early life she designed and produced tableaux for the Methodist Young People's Concerts, in NSW and Queensland.[1]
As a teacher at the University of Newcastle, Australia, she received the Newton-John Award in 1981 for her substantial contribution to teaching in New South Wales[2]
She was a member of the English staff of the College of Advanced Education (now the University of Newcastle, Australia) until 1975.[3]
Published works
An assessment of the poetry of Christopher Brennan in Poems (1913) and The burden of Tyre[4]
A structuralist approach to the plays of Patrick White[5]
Patrick White as Playwright[6]
Speech and drama in the secondary school[7]
Speech and drama in the secondary school, book one for junior secondary classes[8]
Speech and drama in the secondary school, book two : for third and fourth forms of the secondary school[9]
Jess is a published poet who contributed to the book 5 Hunter Valley Poets[10]
Awards and honours
- 1981 - Newton-John Award - University of Newcastle New South Wales Australia.[11]
- Jessie Reid Dyce Memorial Prize in Drama
Further reading
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References
- ↑ "Trove Digitised newspapers - Jess Dyce". Trove. Retrieved 2019-11-15. Unknown parameter
|url-status=ignored (help) - ↑ "All past Newton John award recipients". The University of Newcastle, Australia. 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2019-11-15. Unknown parameter
|url-status=ignored (help) - ↑ Talbot, Norman (1978). 5 Hunter Valley poets : Jean Talbot, Christopher Pollnitz, David McQualter, Jess Dyce, Tim McGee. Newcastle, N.S.W. : Nimrod Publications. ISBN 9780909242022. Search this book on
- ↑ Dyce, J. R. (1983). An assessment of the poetry of Christopher Brennan in Poems (1913) and The burden of Tyre (Thesis thesis). Newcastle, N.S.W. : University of Newcastle.
- ↑ Dyce, J. R. (1970). A structuralist approach to the plays of Patrick White (Thesis thesis).
- ↑ Dyce, J. R (1974). Patrick White as playwright. St. Lucia, Queensland : University of Queensland Press. ISBN 9780702208546. Search this book on
- ↑ Dyce, J. R. (1963). Speech and drama in the secondary school. Melbourne : Thomas Nelson. Search this book on
- ↑ Dyce, J. R. (1963). Speech and drama in the secondary school, book one for junior secondary classes. Melbourne, Vic. : Thomas Nelson, 1963. Search this book on
- ↑ Dyce, J. R. (1965). Speech and drama in the secondary school. book two : for third and fourth forms of the secondary school. Melbourne : Nelson. Search this book on
- ↑ Talbot, Norman (1978). 5 Hunter Valley poets : Jean Talbot, Christopher Pollnitz, David McQualter, Jess Dyce, Tim McGee. Newcastle, N.S.W. : Nimrod Publications. ISBN 9780909242022. Search this book on
- ↑ "Alumni and Newton John Awards - all recipients". The University of Newcastle, Australia. 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2019-11-15. Unknown parameter
|url-status=ignored (help)
External links
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