Susan Sheridan

Susan Sheridan is Professor Emerita in the School of Humanities at Flinders University in Adelaide. She has published widely on women’s writing, feminist cultural studies and Australian cultural history, including Nine Lives: Postwar women writers making their mark (2011). Her latest book is The Fiction of Thea Astley (2016).
All essays by Susan Sheridan
Pity’s cost: In Certain Circles by Elizabeth Harrower
In Certain Circles, completed in 1971 but not published until now, concerns two pairs of siblings living in Sydney in the years immediately after World War II. Place and time are comparable to The Watch Tower, and Harrower’s central theme of abuser and victim caught in a monkey grip is evident, although it informs only one of several key relationships.
Gaslighting: The Poet’s Wife by Mandy Sayer
‘Our marriage wasn’t always unhappy’: so begins this ‘memoir of a marriage’ between Australian writer Mandy Sayer and her first husband, the Afro-American poet Yusef Komunyakaa. What follows is the chronicle of a deeply troubled relationship from the point of view of the poet’s wife.
A bee inside a violin inside a pear: The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud
With The Woman Upstairs, her fifth book, Messud narrows her range, concentrating on a devastated woman recounting a critical event in her life. Nora is an elementary school teacher living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who experiences a ‘Lucy Jordan moment’ when she realises at the age of 37 that her life, like that of the ballad’s heroine, looks small and any hope for change is not for her.
Radiant, everlasting: Dear Life by Alice Munro
Among my collection of Alice Munro’s books, the two most prized are the ones that she autographed for me on a visit to Adelaide in March 1979. One was my copy of her first book of stories, Dance of the Happy Shades (1968). The other was the Women’s Press reprint of Lives of Girls and Women (1971), which my students and I were reading as part of a class on women’s writing.