Speed, Lesley Dr
Position: Course Coordinator, Bachelor of Arts / Senior Lecturer, Humanities
Study area: Humanities and Social Sciences
Location: Mt Helen Campus, Ballarat
Phone: 5327 9759
Email: l.speed@federation.edu.au
Qualifications
Doctor of Philosophy – Monash University - 1997
Bachelor of Arts (Honours) - Monash University - 1991
Teaching
Courses
- Bachelor of Arts
- Bachelor of Arts (Honours)
Units
- Advanced Theory for Honours Students (BAHRS 4033)
- Australian Screen Texts and Industries (BAFLM 2002/3002)
- From Homer to Memes (BATCC 1001)
- Mainstream and Alternative Screen Cultures (BAFLM 2004/3004)
Biography
Lesley is a Senior Lecturer and researcher in media and screen studies. She has taught units in digital literacy, media studies, screen studies, adaptation studies, communication and cultural studies, and interdisciplinary Honours courses, as well as supervising research students from Honours to PhD level. Before teaching at Federation University and the University of Ballarat, she taught at La Trobe University, the University of Melbourne and three campuses of Monash University.
This wide range of experience is reflected in Lesley’s research, which is published in Australia and internationally and cited in many countries and various languages. Her research is required reading in tertiary courses internationally. Her publications include the books Clueless: American Youth in the 1990s and Australian Comedy Films of the 1930s: Modernity, the Urban and the International. Lesley has been a Scholar in Residence at the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, a peer reviewer for many journals and publishers in and outside Australia, and a judge in the ATOM (Australian Teachers of Media) Awards.
Areas of expertise
Lesley’s work includes an emphasis on popular screen texts, extending to digital media, independent screen media, comedy, popular genres and genre-mixing. Her research often centres on social aspects of screen texts, including their relationships to socio-historical contexts, public discourse and shifting ideas about youth, adulthood and everyday life. Her major research projects have focused on comedy and youth culture. However, the ideas underpinning her research are often as much about relationships between screen texts and society as they are about specific platforms, formats or genres. Lesley has pursued research interests in screen comedy; cultural value in relation to popular culture; and social and spatial aspects of screen texts. These interests can be found, individually or in intersecting ways, in her research publications about topics from teen films to early cinema, screen comedy to video games.
Research interests
- Social aspects of screen texts
- Screen comedy
- Popular genres and genre mixing
- Australian and international screen history
- Age, generations and popular culture
- Cultural value and popular screen texts
- Australian video games
Supervision
Current supervisions:
Jenny O'Sullivan, PhD - "A Fine Line: Representations of Non-Mainstream Body Modification in Popular Media" - Associate Supervisor
Completed HDR students:
Courtney O’Neill, PhD – "The good, the bad, the ambivalent: investigating patriarchal and complex representations of motherhood in crime television series" - Principal Supervisor
Duncan Hubber, PhD – "Diegetic Wounds: The Representation of Individual and Collective Trauma in Found Footage Horror Films" – Principal Supervisor
Chloe Benson, PhD – “Bi what means: paratextual and filmic representations of bisexuality in contemporary cinema” – Principal Supervisor
Nicholas Moll, PhD – “Kemo Sabe: Tonto as a developing construction of the Indian character type” – Principal Supervisor
Marian Chivers, MA – “The Warrior Woman in Contemporary Romance Fiction” – Associate Supervisor
Publications
Books
Speed, Lesley. Clueless: American Youth in the 1990s. Routledge, 2018. Cinema and Youth Cultures.
Speed, Lesley. Australian comedy films of the 1930s: Modernity, the urban and the international. St Kilda: Australian Teachers of Media, 2015. The Moving Image 13.
Book chapters and sections
Speed, Lesley. “A Seamless Wedding: Comedy, Diversity, and the International”. Australian Genre Film, edited by Kelly McWilliam and Mark David Ryan, Routledge, 2021, pp. 59–73.
Speed, Lesley. “Way Hilarious: Amy Heckerling as a Female Comedy Director, Writer, and Producer”. Refocus on the Films of Amy Heckerling, edited by Timothy Shary and Frances Smith, Edinburgh UP, 2016, pp. 218–239.
Speed, Lesley. “Comedian comedy”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand 2, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Mark David Ryan and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2015, pp. 79–8 1.
Speed, Lesley. “Director: Ken G. Hall”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand 2, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Mark David Ryan and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2015, pp. 41–44.
Speed, Lesley. “Comedy”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2010, pp. 159–162.
Speed, Lesley. “His Royal Highness”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2010, pp. 163–4.
Speed, Lesley. “Harmony Row”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2010, pp. 165–6.
Speed, Lesley. “A Ticket in Tatts”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2010, pp. 166–7.
Speed, Lesley. “Strike Me Lucky”. Directory of World Cinema: Australia & New Zealand, edited by Ben Goldsmith and Geoff Lealand, Intellect, 2010, pp. 168–9
Speed, Lesley. "Out of the Frying Pan: From Casual Teaching to Temp Work". Gypsy Scholars, Migrant Teachers and the Global Academic Proletariat: Adjunct Labor in Higher Education, edited by Rudolphus Teeuwen and Steffen Hantke, Rodopi, 2007, pp. 127–147.
Refereed journal articles
Speed, Lesley. “Transnational suburbia: Suburban settings in Australian video games”. Continuum: Journal of Media & Culture, vol. 37, issue 2, 2023, pp. 169-181. https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2023.2215973
Speed, Lesley. “Comic investigation and genre-mixing: the television docucomedies of Lawrence Leung, Judith Lucy and Luke McGregor”. Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, vol. 34, no. 5, 2020, pp. 690–702. https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2020.1782838
Speed, Lesley. “Renditions from the inside: Prison Songs, documusical and performative documentary”. Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, vol. 33, no. 3, 2019, pp. 324-336. https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2019.1567686
Speed, Lesley. “Prurient exuberance: early Australian sex hygiene films and the origins of Ozploitation”. Screening the Past, no. 42, 4 October 2017.
Speed, Lesley. “Fishing the waters of life: Zane Grey’s White Death, exploitation film and the Great Barrier Reef”. Studies in Australasian Cinema, vol. 11, no. 1, March 2017, pp. 5–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/17503175.2017.1308906
Speed, Lesley. "The Virtual City in The Doctor Blake Mysteries". Metro, no. 187, Summer 2016, pp. 50–56.
Speed, Lesley. “‘In the best film star tradition’: Claire Adams and Mooramong”. Screening the Past, no. 39, August 2015.
Chivers, Marian, Lesley Speed and Meg Tasker. “The warrior woman in Harlequin’s Bombshell Athena Force series”. Australasian Journal of Popular Culture, vol. 3, no. 3, September 2014, pp. 335–349. https://doi.org/10.1386/ajpc.3.3.335_1
Speed, Lesley. “A handshake and a smile: Video-making, young people and mental health”. Screen Education, no. 59, Spring 2010, pp. 52–57.
Speed, Lesley. “Loose Cannons: White Masculinity and the Vulgar Teen Comedy Film”. Journal of Popular Culture, vol. 43, no. 4, August 2010, pp. 820–841. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5931.2010.00772.x
Speed, Lesley. “Win and Lose: Subculture and Social Difference in Dogs in Space”. Metro, no. 162, 2009, pp. 160–165.
Speed, Lesley. “Strike Me Lucky: Social difference and consumer culture in Roy Rene’s only film.” Screening the Past, no. 26, December 2009. https://www.screeningthepast.com/issue-26-first-release/strike-me-lucky-social-difference-and-consumer-culture-in-roy-rene%E2%80%99s-only-film/
Speed, Lesley. “The comedian comedies: George Wallace’s 1930s comedies, Australian cinema and Hollywood”. Metro, no. 158, 2008, pp. 76–82.
Speed, Lesley. "The possibilities of roads not taken: Intellect and Utopia in the films of Richard Linklater". Journal of Popular Film & Television, vol. 35, no. 3, Fall 2007, pp. 98–106. https://doi.org/10.3200/JPFT.35.3.98-106
Speed, Lesley. "When the Sun Sets over Suburbia: Class and Subculture in Bruce Beresford’s Puberty Blues". Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, vol. 20, no. 3, September 2006, pp. 407–418. https://doi.org/10.1080/10304310600814417
Speed, Lesley. "'No matter how far you run’: Looking for Alibrandi and coming of age in Italo-Australian cinema and girlhood". Screening the Past, no. 19, 2006. https://www.screeningthepast.com/issue-19-first-release/no-matter-how-far-you-run-looking-for-alibrandi%C2%A0and-coming-of-age-in-italo-australian-cinema-and-girlhood/
Speed, Lesley. "Life as a Pizza: The Comic Traditions of Wogsploitation Films". Metro, nos. 146/147, 2005, pp. 136–144.
Speed, Lesley. "You and Me Against the World: Revisiting Puberty Blues". Metro, no. 140, 2004, pp. 54–60.
Speed, Lesley. "A World Ruled by Hilarity: Gender and Low Comedy in the Films of Amy Heckerling". Senses of Cinema, no. 22, October 2002. https://www.sensesofcinema.com/2002/filmmaker-profiles/heckerling/
Speed, Lesley. "Reading, writing and unruliness: Female education in the St Trinian’s films". International Journal of Cultural Studies, vol. 5, no. 2, June 2002, pp. 221–238. https://doi.org/10.1177/13678779020050025
Speed, Lesley. "Moving On Up: Education in Black American Youth Films". Journal of Popular Film & Television, vol. 29, no. 2, Summer 2001, pp. 82–91. https://doi.org/10.1080/01956050109601012
Speed, Lesley. "Together in Electric Dreams: Films Revisiting 1980s Youth". Journal of Popular Film & Television, vol. 28, no. 1, Spring 2000, pp. 22–29. https://doi.org/10.1080/01956050009602818
Speed, Lesley. "Millennium Man: Comedy and Masculinity in the Films of Mike Myers". Metro, no 120, 1999, pp. 56–64.
Speed, Lesley. "Tuesday's Gone: The Nostalgic Teen Film". Journal of Popular Film & Television, vol. 26, no. 1, Spring 1998, pp. 24–32. https://doi.org/10.1080/01956059809602770
Speed, Lesley. "Pastel Romances: The Teen Films of John Hughes". Metro, nos. 113/114, 1998, pp. 103–110.
Speed, Lesley. "Kids". Metro, no. 105, 1996, pp. 4–10.
Speed, Lesley. "Good Fun and Bad Hair Days: Girls in Teen Film". Metro, no. 101, 1995, pp. 24–30.
Conference and seminar presentations
Speed, Lesley. “The fallacy of age determinism in screen comedy: Trainwreck and The Intern”. Cultural Enquiry Research Group, Federation University, October 2017.
Speed, Lesley. “Screen comedy and the fallacy of age determinism”. Australasian Humour Studies Network Colloquium, Federation University, February 2017.
Speed, Lesley. "'The Best Men in the Metrolopis [sic]': Speech and language in 1930s Australian comedy films". Cultural Enquiry Research Group, University of Ballarat, 2012.
Speed, Lesley. "Make us smile: Australian comedy film's early peak and its challenges to cultural values in the 1930s". National Film and Sound Archive, 2010.
Speed, Lesley. "George Wallace's 1930s comedies, Australian cinema and Hollywood". School of Behavioural and Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Ballarat, 2009.
Speed, Lesley. "Insights into mental health". DVD presentation. Grampians Mental Health Conference, 2009.
Boyd, Candice, and Lesley Speed. "Development and evaluation of a pilot film-making program for rural youth with serious mental illness". Psychology Colloquium, School of Behavioural and Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Ballarat, 2008.
Speed, Lesley. "Anti-intellectualism in the New Hollywood". School of Behavioural and Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Ballarat, 2007.
Speed, Lesley. "Life as a pizza: the comic traditions of wogsploitation films". School of Behavioural and Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Ballarat, 2006.
Associations
- Australasian Humour Studies Network (AHSN), member
- ATOM (Australian Teachers of Media) Awards, judge