The Unknown Industrial Prisoner Explained

The Unknown Industrial Prisoner
Author:David Ireland
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Angus and Robertson, Australia
Release Date:1971
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:379 pp
Preceded By:The Chantic Bird
Followed By:The Flesheaters

The Unknown Industrial Prisoner (1971) is a Miles Franklin Award-winning novel by Australian author David Ireland.[1]

In 1978 a film version was planned, to be produced by Richard Mason and directed by Arch Nicholson, with Ken Cameron also working on it. Funding was from Film Australia. However, the Minister for Home Affairs Bob Ellicott cancelled the film on the grounds it was uncommercial, a rare instance of political interference in the Australian film industry.[2] [3]

Critical reception

Helen Brown in The Canberra Times noted that the novel is "a big, good book with an important and timely theme and it should assure David Ireland a place in the front ranks of contemporary Australian writers. Yet my chewing was dogged and dutiful rather than enjoyable and the pages had a persistent tendency to stick in my throat...The writing is excellent, sliding naturally from tough, idiomatic Australian to occasional passages of great power and beauty. The ironic Australian tone of voice is at its best, the timing, the rhythm and the words exactly right. It is my guess David Ireland has put the true flavour of Australian English on the literary map."[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/C57293 Austlit - The Unknown Industrial Prisoner by David Ireland
  2. David Stratton, The Last New Wave: The Australian Film Revival, Angus & Robertson, 1980 p16
  3. Rod Bishop & Peter Beilby, "Ken Cameron", Cinema Papers, March–April 1979 p 258
  4. Web site: "An invocation of disaster" . The Canberra Times, 26 February 1972, p12. 13 July 2023.