https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549418821840
European Journal of Cultural Studies
1–16
© The Author(s) 2019
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DOI: 10.1177/1367549418821840
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EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF
‘Steve is twice the Aussie
icon you will ever be’:
Germaine Greer, the
Crocodile Hunter’s death,
and nationalistic misogyny
Anthea Taylor
The University of Sydney, Australia
Abstract
In September 2006, Australia’s most iconic feminist, Germaine Greer, wrote a
controversial article in response to the death of celebrity wildlife presenter Steve
Irwin. In the Guardian piece, entitled ‘That sort of self-delusion is what it takes to
be a real Aussie larrikin’, Greer concluded, ‘The animal world has finally taken its
revenge on Irwin’. For hundreds of Australian readers, Greer’s public response to the
untimely demise of a purported national ‘hero’ represented a symbolic assault not
just on the ’Crocodile Hunter’s’ grieving family but on the nation itself. Following
the article’s appearance, Greer’s agents – Gillon Aitken Associates, based in the
United Kingdom – received copious amounts of hate mail directed towards the
controversial celebrity feminist; these emails are contained in the recently acquired
Greer archive at the University of Melbourne and provide important insights into
affective responses to this polarising figure. Tightly policing the boundaries of what
constitutes ‘Australian-ness’ as well as mobilising problematic assumptions about
the correct way of publicly doing femininity, these emails call into question Greer’s
authority to speak publicly not just about this matter but about any issue at all. In
so doing, these emails – which include threats of violence – work to contest the
‘newness’ of the vitriolic, misogynistic hate speech commonly directed towards vocal
women in the contemporary mediasphere (especially via platforms such as Twitter).
Against the representation of Irwin as model Australian, Greer is dismissed not
just as a ‘bad’ woman but as a ‘bad’ citizen. Accordingly, this article considers both
the kind of ‘Greer’ and the kind of ‘Irwin’ being discursively constructed in these
emails, and how the mutually constitutive discourses of misogyny and nationalism
Corresponding author:
Anthea Taylor, Department of Gender and Cultural Studies, The University of Sydney,
Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia.
Email: anthea.taylor@sydney.edu.au
821840ECS 0 0 10.1177/1367549418821840European Journal of Cultural StudiesTaylor
research-article 2019
Article