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Editor: Elizabeth McMahon
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Target Article
Dorothy Johnston discusses her sequel to The Trojan Dogin Cyberspace
and Canberra Crime Fiction.
Plus
In Paradox on the Queensland Frontier, Libby Robin uses the famous
'discovery' of the egg-laying habits of platypus to look at some
cross-cultural dimensions of science in nineteenth century Australia. The
'accidental' nature of scientific discovery unfolds in country chosen not
for platypus, but for lungfish. Settler naturalists found themselves
excluded from a science dependent upon an unlikely juxtaposition of
European patronage and Aboriginal ecological knowledge.
and Beth Spencer ponders John Howard's reluctance to
say Those two little words.
Reviews
Ken Gelder reviews Peter Read's latest book
in The Imaginary Eco-(Pre-)Historian: Peter
Read's Belongingas a Postcolonial 'Symptom'.
And for those who were bitten by Olympics fever, have a look at:
and
Philip Batty's "Saluting the dot-spangled banner: Aboriginal
Culture, National Identity and the Australian Republic" which
looks at the appropriation of Aboriginal tropes in representations
of Australian identity, particularly in the promotion of the
Sydney 2000 Olympics. This essay was published by AHRin 1998.
In good oil
Check out some
new conferences. This section is being updated continually.
Also see the calls for papers from scholarly
journals. You are
welcome to submit your calls for
posting on
this page.
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