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Mark Dapin

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Occupation
  
Journalist, author

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Mark Dapin

Years active
  
1988 – present


Mark Dapin Fighting the shame of surrender The Australian

Born
  
1963
United Kingdom

Education
  
University of Warwick BA (hons), University of Technology Sydney (MA), Griffith University Queensland (BGS)

Agent
  
Deborah Callaghan Literary Management

Books
  
Strange Country, Spirit House, The Nashos' War: Aust, Fridge Magnets Are Basta, Sex & Money: How I Liv

Mark Dapin: Fact and Fiction in the Vietnam War


Mark Dapin (born 1963) is an award-winning Australian journalist, author, historian and screenwriter. He is best known for his long-running column in Good Weekend magazine.

Contents

Mark Dapin Mark Dapin talks Books War and The Way Men Behave When

Early life

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Mark Dapin was born in Britain and emigrated to Australia in 1989.

Career

Mark Dapin Spirit of a wartime hero The Australian Jewish NewsThe

Dapin was the founding chief sub-editor of the Australian Financial Review Magazine in 1995. From 1998 to 2002, he was editor and then editor-in-chief of Ralph magazine. He has written for a variety of publications including The Sydney Morning Herald, The Guardian, The Times, Penthouse and Good Weekend. He has a Bachelor of Social Science degree and a Masters in Journalism from UTS and has taught journalism courses at the University of Sydney and Macleay College.

Mark Dapin Mark Dapin Australian Crime Writers Association

In 2008, Dapin was thrown out of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay’s home when he was only minutes into a profile interview for Good Weekend magazine. The incident – and subsequent attempts by Ramsay’s publicists to control the story – formed the basis of Dapin’s feature ‘Nightmare on Ramsay Street’ and a later essay for the literary magazine Meanjin. Dapin’s work on Ramsay was examined in two essays in The Profiling Handbook: "What's the Point of a Profile? The Curious Cases of Mark Dapin on Gordon Ramsay and Jack Marx on Russell Crowe" by Fiona Giles, and "Double Vision: Profile of a Profile" by Gillian Rennie. Rennie, a lecturer at Rhodes University, South Africa, uses Dapin’s thoughts on the Ramsay interview as a prism for her own reflections on her famous profile of Epainette Mbeki. Giles, a professor at Sydney University, examines Dapin's work alongside that of his contemporary, Jack Marx. She writes: "both journalists are well-known, mid-career writers bringing a gonzo, rock 'n' roll sensibility to their work. Well-versed in the post-New Journalism style, they include themselves in their stories, and are entertainingly provocative. They enjoy a high status in Australia as award-winning writers, are known to court controversy, and have been sacked from Australia’s second largest print empire, Fairfax Media – occasions which attracted media coverage. They are both authors of book-length literary journalism in addition to feature-length profiles, and are admired for being independent thinkers with a quick wit."

Dapin’s departure in 2012 from Fairfax Media (to which he subsequently returned as a contributor) and the loss of his Good Weekend column, were reported extensively in the Australian press.[1][2] In recent years, he has become more prominent as a novelist and historian. In July 2014 he was commissioned by the Centenary of Anzac Jewish Program to write a military history book Jewish Anzacs, published by the Sydney Jewish Museum. In July 2017 he was named as one of the screenwriters on the second season of TV show Wolf Creek.

Interviews

  • The Sydney Morning Herald - "Mark Dapin, author of R&R, finds children and fiction are all that matters" by Susan Chenery
  • Awards and nominations

  • 2010, Ned Kelly Awards, best first fiction, winner, King of the Cross
  • 2012, Miles Franklin Award, longlist, Spirit House
  • 2012, Age Book of the Year, shortlist, Spirit House
  • 2014, Royal Society of Literature’s Ondaatje Prize, shortlist, Spirit House
  • 2015, 'The Nib': CAL Waverley Library Award for Literature — Alex Buzo Shortlist Prize, winner, The Nashos' War
  • 2015, 'The Nib': CAL Waverley Library Award for Literature — People's Choice Award, winner, The Nashos' War
  • 2016, New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction, shortlist, The Nashos' War
  • 2016, Ned Kelly Awards, best crime novel, shortlist, R&R
  • References

    Mark Dapin Wikipedia