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Australian rules football in Australian popular culture : ウィキペディア英語版 | Australian rules football in Australian popular culture
Australian rules football has had a significant impact on Australian popular culture, capturing the imagination of Australian film, art, music, television and literature. ==Literature== Barry Oakley's satiric football novel ''A Salute to the Great McCarthy'' was published in 1970. Crime novelist Kerry Greenwood wrote the 1991 short story ''The Vanishing of Jock McHale's Hat''. Alan Wearne's 1997 novel ''Kicking in Danger'' is about an Essendon player turned private eye who specialises in football-related cases.〔McCann, Andrew. ''Writing the Everyday: Australian Literature and the Limits of Suburbia''. University of Queensland Press, 1998. ISBN 0702230960, pp. 131–132.〕 Football plays a major role in the 1998 novel ''Deadly, Unna?'' by Phillip Gwynne. ''The Call'' (1998), written by Martin Flanagan, is a semi-fictional account of football pioneer Tom Wills. Set during the 1970s, the 1999 novel ''Saturday Afternoon Fever'' by comedian Matthew Hardy follows a boy on weekend trips to VFL games, specifically to see his hero, St Kilda's Trevor Barker. Tony Wilson's debut novel ''Players'' (2005) satirises the relationship between football and the media.〔 In 2012, Paul D. Carter won The Australian/Vogel Literary Award for his debut novel ''Eleven Seasons'', a coming-of-age story about a teenager and the role football plays in shaping his identity.〔Westwood, Matthew (27 April 2012). ("Paul D. Carter's novel Eleven Seasons wins The Australian Vogel's Literary Award" ), ''The Australian''. Retrieved on 8 July 2012.〕
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