Global Utilities

History Program

Research Publications

Dr Tracey Banivanua-Mar
Dr Lisa Beaven
Dr Phillip Bull
Dr Richard Broome
Dr Yolande Collins
Dr Charles Fahey
Dr Ruth Ford
Dr Ann Gardner
Dr Claudia Haake
Dr Katie Holmes
Dr Adrian Jones

Dr Caroline Jordan
Dr Robert Kenny
Professor Diane Erica Kirkby
Professor Marilyn Lake
Dr Marina Larsson
Dr Timothy Minchin
Dr Adelina Modesti
Dr Jennifer Ridden
Dr Robert Robertson
Dr Patrick Wolfe
Dr Shannon Woodcock
Dr Clare Wright

Dr Tracey Banivanua-Mar

Books
  • Violence and Colonial Dialogue: The Australia-Pacific Labor Trade, Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2007.
  • Banivanua Mar, T. and Evans, J., (eds.), Writing Colonial History: Comparative Perspectives, Melbourne: RMIT Publishers, 2002.
  • Banivanua Mar, T and Edmonds, P., (eds), Making Space: Settler-Colonial Perspectives on Land, Place and Identity, (London: Palgrave, forthcoming 2009)
Articles and Chapters
  • Banivanua Mar, T., ‘White Wilderness: fear and loathing on Queensland’s racial borderlands’, Re-Orienting Whiteness, eds. L. Boucer, K. Ellinghaus, J. Carey, (In Press with Palgrave U.S.).
  • Banivanua Mar, T., “‘A Thousand Miles of Cannibal Lands’: Imagining Away Genocide in the Re-Colonization of West Papua’”, The Journal of Genocide Research, 10:4, (2008).
  • Banivanua Mar, T., ‘The Bunya Black’: Fear and Loathing on Queensland’s Racial Borderlands’, Historicising Whiteness: Transnational Perspectives on the Construction of an Identity, (Melbourne: RMIT Publishing, 2007), pp. 328-337.
  • Banivanua Mar, T., “Sugar and Labor: Tracking Empires”, Benjamin, T., (ed.), Encyclopedia of Western Colonialism Since 1450, (Detroit: McMillan Reference, USA 2007): 1064-67
  • Banivanua Mar, T., “Human Rights through the Lens of Critical Race Theory”, Just Policy, 43, (2007): 55-67.
  • “Cannibalism in Fiji: A Study in Colonialism’s Discursive Atavism’, Grimshaw, P. and R. McGregor, (eds.), Collisions of Cultures and Identities: Settlers and Indigenous Peoples, (Melbourne: RMIT Publishing, 2006): 155-75.
  • “Consolidating Violence and Colonial Rule: Discipline and Protection in Colonial Queensland”, Postcolonial Studies, 8:3 (2005): 303-320.
  • "'No Aboriginal Native of … the Islands of the Pacific': South Sea Islanders and the Distant Vote of the Commonwealth', in Chesterman, John and David Philips, (eds.), Selective Democracy: Race, Gender and the Australian Vote, (Melbourne: Melbourne Publishing Group, 2003): 71-88.
  • 'Stabilising Colonial Violence: Indentured Labour and Settlement in Colonial Quennsland', Writing Colonial History: Comparative Perspectives, Ed(s). Julie Evans and Tracey Banivanua Mar, Carlton, Dept. of History, University of Melbourne, 2002, 145-163.

Dr Lisa Beaven

Recent publications include
  • ‘Cardinal Camillo Massimo as art agent of the Altieri’, in Art and Identity in Early Modern Rome, M. Bury and J. Burke (eds), Ashgate, 2008, pp. 171-187
  • ‘Someone to watch over me: The Guardian Angel as Superhero in seventeenth century Rome’, in Wendy Haslem, Chris Mackie & Angela Ndalianis (eds.), Super/Heroes: An Anthology, , New Academia Press, Washington, 2007. ISBN 0-9777908-4-3. Chapter 18, pp. 251-261.
  • ‘Claude Lorrain’s Harbour Scenes: sun, science and the theatre in the Barberini years’, in David R. Marshall (ed.), Art, Site and Spectacle: Studies in Early Modern Visual Culture, Melbourne, Fine Arts Network,2007, pp. 147-161.
  • ‘Cardinal Camillo Massimo and Claude Lorrain: Landscape and the construction of identity in seicento Rome’, Storia dell’Arte, no. 112, April 2006 pp. 23-36.
Conference Papers
  • ‘Francesco da Hollanda, Camillo Massimo and the Domus Aurea’, conference paper, international interdisciplinary conference ‘Before and After Palladio’s Rome’, 20-22 February, 2008, British School at Rome, Rome, Italy
  • ‘Claude Lorrain and La Crescenza: Landscape, ecology and climate change in the Roman Campagna’, conference paper, international interdisciplinary conference, ‘Landscape and Environment 1480-1750’, Early Modern Research Group, Reading University, 14-16 July, Reading University, United Kingdom

Dr Phillip Bull

Books
  • (ed. with Frances Devlin-Glass and Helen Doyle), Ireland and Australia, 1798–1998: Studies in Culture, Identity and Migration, Sydney, Crossing Press, 2000.
    Land, Politics and Nationalism: A study of the Irish Land Question, Dublin, Gill & Macmillan, 1996.
Articles
  • ‘Sacrifice, Liberalism and the Great War: The case of Ireland’, War and Society, xxiii (September 2005), pp. 13–21.
  • ‘The Formation of the United Irish League, 1898-1900: The dynamics of Irish agrarian agitation’, Irish Historical Studies, no. 132, November 2003.
    ‘Isaac Butt and the politics of accommodation’, Australian Journal of Irish Studies, i (2001), pp. 158-66.
  • ‘The significance of the nationalist response to the Irish land act of 1903’, Irish Historical Studies, xxviii, no. 111 (May 1993), pp. 283-305.
Chapters in Books
  • ‘Isaac Butt, 'British Liberalism and an alternative Nationalist tradition’, in D. George Boyce and Roger Swift (eds), Essays in Modern Irish History: A Festshrift for Patrick Buckland, Dublin, Four Courts Press, forthcoming, pp. 147–163.
  • ‘The fall of Parnell: the political context of his intransigence’, in D.G. Boyce and Alan O’Day (eds), Parnell in perspective, London, Routledge, 1991, pp. 129–47.

Dr Richard Broome

Selected Publications inlcude
Books
  • with Corinne Manning, 'A Man of All Tribes': The Life of Alick Jackomos, Aboriginal Studies Press, 2006.
  • Aboriginal Victorians: A History Since 1800, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 2005.
    with Alick Jackomos, Sideshow Alley, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 1998.
    Aboriginal Australians: Black Responses to White Dominance, 1788-2001
    , Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 2001, revised 3rd edition.
Book Chapters
  • Broome, R. ‘The Statistics of Frontier Conflict’, in Bain Attwood and S. G. Foster, Frontier Conflict. The Australian Experience, National Museum of Australia, 2003, pp. 88-98.
  • '"No One thinks of Us": The Framlingham Aboriginal Community in the Great Depression’, in P. Bastien and R. Bell (eds), Through Depression and War: The United States and Australia, Australian and American Fulbright Commission & Australian and New Zealand American Studies Association, 2002, pp. 62-81.
  • 'The Australian Reaction to Jack Johnson, Black Pugilist, 1907-9', reprinted in abridged form in David Headon (ed.), The Best Ever Australian Sports Writing: A 200 Year Collection, Black Inc., Melbourne, 2001, pp. 532-45.
Major Articles
  • "The Politics and Ethics of Writing Indigenous Histories", Melbourne Historical Journal, vol. 33, 2005, pp. 6-10.
  • ‘”There were Greens Every Year Mr Green was Here”: Right Behaviour and the Struggle for Autonomy at Coranderrk Aboriginal Reserve’, History Australia, vol. 3, no. 2, December 2006.
  • ‘Windows on Other Worlds. The Rise and Fall of Sideshow Alley’ Australian Historical Studies, vol. 30, no. 112: 1-22, April 1999.

Dr Yolande Collins

  • M. Butcher & Y.M.J. Collins (eds) Bendigo at work: An industrial history, Bendigo, Holland House, 2005.
  • Y.M.J. Collins ‘Introduction' in M. Butcher & Y.M.J. Collins (eds) Bendigo at work: An industrial history, op.cit.
  • Y.M.J. Collins ‘The Cinderella industry: A history of the textile industry in the Greater Bendigo district from 1912 to 1966' in M. Butcher & Y.M.J. Collins (eds) Bendigo at work: An industrial history, op.cit.
  • Y.M.J. Collins & S.A. Kippen ‘Working conditions' in M. Butcher & Y.M.J. Collins (eds) Bendigo at work: An industrial history, op.cit.
    H. Bullows & Y.M.J. Collins ‘The Bendigo Ordnance Factory' in M. Butcher &
  • Y.M.J. Collins (eds) Bendigo at work: An industrial history, op. cit.
  • Y.M.J. Collins ‘Sent up there to die? The Victorian metropolitan patient transfer scheme of the 1920s and 30s’ Health and History, Vol.6, no.1, 2004, pp.29-66.
  • S. A. Kippen & Y.M.J. Collins ‘Radical Reformers: the role of medical men in improving working conditions on the Bendigo goldfields’ Journal of Australasian Mining History, Vol. 2 Sept. 2004, pp.75 – 89.
  • S.A.Kippen & Y.M.J. Collins ‘Radon at the Wheal South Crofty: The Social Construction of an occupational health and safety issue’ Cornish Studies, Vol. 12, 2004, pp. 201-214.
  • Collins, Y.M.J. & S.A. Kippen ‘The Sairey Gamps of Victorian nursing? Tales of drunk and disorderly wardsmen in Victorian public hospitals between the 1850s and the 1880s.’ Health and History, Vol.5, no.1, 2003, pp 42-64.
  • Bennington, L. & Y.M.J. Collins ‘The good, the bad and the inaccessible: Public reporting of Best Value in Victoria’, paper presented to the Australia and New Zealand Academy of Management Conference, Beechworth, 2002.
  • Butcher, M. & Y.M.J. Collins Postwar Portrait: Photographs of Alan Doney 1900 – 1987, Bendigo, Holland House, 2002.
  • Butcher, M. & Y.M.J. Collins An American on the Goldfields: The 1861 Bendigo photographs of Benjamin Pierce Batchelder, Bendigo, Holland House, 2002. (Commendation, Victorian Community History Awards.)
  • Rogers, M.A. & Y.M.J. Collins (eds) The Future of Australia’s Country Towns, CSRC, May 2001.
  • Collins, Y.M.J. ‘Health Care in rural Australia’ in S. Lockie & L. Bourke, Rurality Bites: The social and environmental transformation of rural Australia, Annadale, NSW, Pluto Press: 2001.
  • Y.M.J. Collins “Practical research in rural communities: Community benefits and the value for student learning.” refereed paper presented to Higher Education and Community Engagement conference in Ipswich, NSW: 2000.
  • Collins, Y. 'Love’s labours lost: bureaucratic independence versus ministerial control', presented to and then collated in an edited Proceedings of the History of Medicine Conference, Sydney, July 1999.
  • Collins, Y. & S. Kippen (eds), Aprons and Arches: A history of Bendigo Hospital Trained Nurses, 1883 - 1989, Holland House Publishing, 1998.
  • Collins, Y. "The Chinese and Public Health in Bendigo: 1850s - 1910". Conference Proceedings of the Australian Medical History Association
  • Conference, Feb. 1993 [Hobart, 1994].
    Collins, Y. ‘Visiting overseas “experts” and their influence on hospital reform in Victoria (Australia), 1922 – 1940’, in New Countries and Old Medicine, Proceedings of an international conference on the History of Medicine and Health, ed. by L.Bryder and D.Dow [Auckland, 1994].

Dr Charles Fahey

  • ‘From St Just to St Just Point: Cornish Migration to Nineteenth-century Victoria’, in Philip Payton  (ed) Cornish Studies 15 University of Exeter Press: Exeter, 2007.
  • Moving North: technological change, land holding and the development of agriculture in Northern Victoria, 1870-1914, in Alan Mayne (ed), Beyond the Black Stump: histories of outback Australia Wakefield Press: Adelaide, 2008.
  • ‘Harvester men and Women: The making of the Harvester Decision’ (with John Lack) in Julie Kimber and Peter Love, The Time of their lives: The Eight Hour Day and working life, The Australian Society for the Study of Labour History: Melbourne 2007.
  • ‘The industrialist, the trade unionist and the judge: The Harvester Judgement of 1907 revisited’ (with john Lack), Victorian Historical Journal, Volume 79, Number 1, June 2008.

Dr Ruth


Ford

Selected chapters and articles include
  • ‘Filthy, obscene and mad’: Engendering “homophobia” in Australia, 1940s-1960s’, in Shirleene Robinson, ed., Homophobia: An Australian History, Federation Press, 2008.
  • 'Prove first you're a male': A farmhand's claim for wages in 1929 Australia', Labour History, No 90, May 2006, pp. 1-21‘
  • “They give up domestic help and go out harvesting”; Women fruit-pickers and fruit-packers in 1912 Australia ', History Australia, vol.2, no.2, 2004, pp.07.1-07.12.
  • ‘Rural Women workers struggling for wage justice through the Commonwealth Arbitration Court in pre-World War 1 Australia’ in Transforming Labour: proceedings of the Eight National Labour History Conference, eds., Bradley Bowden and John Kellet, Brisbane Labour History Association, Brisbane, 2003, pp.133-141.
  • ‘'Sexuality and Madness: Regulating women's gender ‘deviance' through the Asylum', in Catharine Coleborne and Dolly MacKinnon, eds., Madness in Australia: History, Heritage and the Asylum, UQP/API, 2003, pp.109-120.
  • ‘“The man-woman murderer”: sex fraud, sexual inversion and the unmentionable article in 1920s Australia ', Gender and History, vol.12, no.1, April 2000, pp.158-196.
  • ‘Speculating on scrapbooks, sex and desire: issues in lesbian history', Australian Historical Studies, vol. 27, no.106, April 1996, pp.11-26.
    'Lesbians and loose women: female sexuality and the women's services during World War 2', in Joy Damousi and Marilyn Lake, eds., Gender and War, Cambridge University Press, 1995, pp.81-104.
  • 'Lady friends and sexual deviationists: lesbians and the law in Australia , 1920s - 1950s' in Diane Kirkby, ed., Sex, Power and Justice: historical perspectives on the law in Australia, 1788-1990, Oxford University Press, 1995, pp.33-49.
  • 'They "were wed, and merrily rang the bells": Gender-crossing and same-sex marriage in Australia, 1900-1940' in Graham Willet and David Phillips, eds., Australian Gay and Lesbian Perspectives 5, Australian Centre for Lesbian and Gay Research, 2000, pp.41-66.
  • ‘Disciplined, punished and resisting bodies: lesbian women and the Australian armed services, 1950s-60s', Lilith: a Feminist History Journal, no. 9, Autumn, 1996, pp.53-77.

Dr Ann Gardner

  • “The Narratives of Solomon’s Reign in the Light of the Historiography of other Ancient Civilisations”, Australian Biblical Review 56, 2008, 1-18
  • "Daniel: God, Humans and Earth”, Pacifica 20,3, 2007, 249-61
  • "1 Chron 8:28 - 32; 9:35-38: Complementary or Contrasting Genealogies?" Australian Biblical Review 55, 2007, 13-28
  • "Decoding Daniel: The Case of Dan 7,5”, Biblica 88,2, 2007, 222-233
  • "Isaiah 66:3: Condemnation of Temple and Sacrifice or Contrast of the Arrogant with the Humble?" Revue Biblique 113-4, 2006, 506-28
  • "Isaiah 65:20: Centenarians or Millenarians?" Biblica 85,1, 2005, 88-96
  • "The Identity of Bathsheba", Revue Biblique 112-4, 2005, 521-535
  • "The Nature of the New Heavens and New Earth in Isaiah 66:22", Australian Biblical Review 50, 2002, 10-27
  • "Eco or Anthropological Justice: a Study of the New Heavens and the New Earth in Isaiah 65:17", in The Earth Bible IV, Sheffield, Sheffield University Press, 2001, pp.204-218
  • "Dan 7:2-14: Another Look at its Mythic Pattern" Biblica 82, 2, 2001, pp.244-252
  • "Ecojustice: A Study of Gen 6:9-11" in The Earth Bible, II, Sheffield, Sheffield University Press, 2000, pp.117-29

Dr Claudia Haake

Selected research publications inlcude
Books
  • The State, Removal and Indigenous Peoples in the United States and Mexico, c. 1620-2000, Routledge, 2007.
  • Removals – Forced Migration in the Modern World, co-edited by Richard Bessel, Cambridge University Press, 2009 (forthcoming).
Book Chapters
  • The treaty of Fort Pitt', Milestones Documents in American History Volume 1: 1763- 1823, Ed(s). Paul Finkelman and Bruce A. Lesh, New York, Schlager, 2008
  • ‘No Place for the Delawares? – Removal and Loss of Federal Recognition’, in Joy Porter (ed.), Place in Native American History, Literature and Culture, Peter Lang, 2007.

Articles (in English)

  • ‘Identity, Sovereignty and Power: the Cherokee-Delaware Agreement of 1867, Past and Present’, American Indian Quarterly, vol. 26, no. 3, 2002.
    ‘Delaware Identity in the Cherokee Nation’, Indigenous Nations Studies Journal, vol. 3, no. 1, 2003.
Articles (in German)
  • ‘Two Stories – Yaqui Resistance in Sonora and Yucatán’, in Nikolaus Böttcher and Bernd Hausberger (eds.), Poder y resistencia en la historia de América Latina, Berlin/Frankfurt: Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut/Vervuert, 2005.
  • ‘Kampf um indigene Souveränität – Die Auslagerung politischer Kommunikation in pseudo-legale Kommunikationsräume am Beispiel der Delawaren’, in Christian Büschges and Joanna Pfaff-Czarnecka (eds.), Ethnisierung und De-Ethnisierung des Politischen, Campus Verlag, 2007.

Dr Katie Holmes

  • Reading the Garden: the Settlement of Australia. Co-authored with Susan K. Martin & Kylie Mirmohamadi, Melbourne University Publishing, 2008
  • Green Pens: a collection of garden writing. Co-edited with Susan K. Martin & Kylie Mirmohamadi, MUP: Carlton, 2004.
  • Women’s Rights, Human Rights; international historical perspectives. Co-edited with Patricia Grimshaw and Marilyn Lake, Palgrave: New York, 2001.
  • Spaces in Her Day: Australian Women’s Diaries of the 1920s and 1930s.  Allen and Unwin: Nth Sydney, 1995.  Short listed for the 1996 NSW Premiers award for non-fiction in two categories (non-fiction and literary or cultural criticism); short listed the 1996 Age non-fiction book of the year; short listed for the 1996 ‘Talking Book’ award.
  • ‘Marking Time: Australian Women’s Diaries of 1920s & 1930s’. Forthcoming in, Arianne Baggerman & Rudulf Dekker (eds) Controlling Time and Shaping the Self, Brill, 2008.
  • ‘Planting Hope with Potatoes’: gardens, memory and place making’. In Marilyn Lake (ed.), Memory Monuments and Memorials, MUP: Carlton, 2006
  • ‘Past Ö Present Ö Future Ö: the Future of Feminist History’, in Lilith: a feminist history journal, November 2006, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 1-12
  • ‘Gardening at the Edge: Judith Wright’s desert garden, Mongarlowe, New South Wales’, in Australian Humanities Review, June 2005, www.lib.latrobe.edu.au/AHR/archive/Issue-July-2005/08Holmes
  • ‘”In spite of it all, the garden still stands”: gardens, landscape and cultural history’, in Hsu-Ming and Richard White (eds), Cultural History in Australia, University of NSW Press, 2003.
  • ‘“I have built up a little garden”: the vernacular garden, national identity and a sense of place’, Studies in the History of Gardens and Designed Landscapes, vol 21, no. 2, April-June 2001, pp.115-121.
  • ‘In Her Master’s House and Garden’, in Patrick Troy (ed.) A History of European Housing in Australia, Melbourne, Cambridge University Press, 2000.
  • ‘”Filling the Empty Cradles”: sexuality, maternity, and the effects of depression and war on gender relations in Australia’, in Peter Bastian and Roger Bell (eds), Through Depression and War: Australia and t20 June, 2008ldquo;Spinsters Indispensable”: Feminists, single women and the critique of marriage, 1890-1920’, Australian Historical Studies, April, 1998, pp.68–90.

Dr Adrian Jones

Recent publications include
On Russian history
  • Late-Imperial Russia: An Interpretation: Three Visions, Two Cultures, One Peasantry, Bern, Peter Lang, 1997, 457 pp.
  • ‘Easts and Wests Befuddled: Russian Intelligentsia Responses to the Russo-Japanese War’ in The Russo-Japanese War in Cultural Perspective, eds David Wells & Sandra Wilson, Macmillan, 1999, ch. 7.
  • ‘Which Social History of Russia?’ and ‘The Village as Votchina (Вотчина): Attitudes to Property in the Post-Emancipation Russian Village’, The Soviet and
  • Post-Soviet Review, 27: 2-3 (2000).
    ‘Peripheral Vision: A Russian Bourgeois’ Arctic Enlightenment’, The Historical Journal, 48: 3 (2005).
On historiography
  • Alain Badiou and Authentic Revolutions: Methods of Intellectual Inquiry', Thesis Eleven, forthcoming.
  • ‘Vivid History: Existentialist phenomenology as a new way to understand an old way of writing history, and as a source of renewal for the writing of history’, Storia della storiografia, 54 (2008).
  • ‘Word and Deed: Why A Post-Poststructural History Is Needed and How It Might Look’, The Historical Journal, 43: 2 (June 2000).
  • Historically Speaking: The Bulletin of the Historical Society of the USA, 7: 2 (November-December 2005).
  • ‘Reporting in Prose: Reconsidering Ways of Writing History’, The European Legacy, 12: 3 (March 2007).
On Ottoman history
  • ‘A Note on Atatürk’s Words about Gallipoli’, History Australia, 2: 1 (December 2004).
  • ‘An Empress and a Grand Vizier: Catherine, Baltacı Mehmed and the Battle of the Prut, 1711’ in Omeljan Pritsak Armağanı / A Tribute to Omeljan Pritsak, eds Mehmet Alpargu and Yücel Öztürk, Adapazarı, Sakarya Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2007.
On Australian history
  • Follow the Gleam: A History of Essendon Primary School, 1850-2000, Melbourne, Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2000, 234 pp. Winner of the Information Victoria prize for the best book on the history of Victoria, 2001.
  • ‘History Teaching in Australia: Stories are needed as well as analysis’, Australian Historical Association Bulletin, 96 (June 2003).

Dr Caroline Jordan

Recent books and articles include
  • Picturesque Pursuits: Colonial Women Artists and the Amateur Tradition Melbourne University Press, 2005.
  • Kate Darian Smith, Richard Gillespie, Caroline Jordan and Elizabeth Willis, Seize the Day: Australia, Exhibitions and the World, Monash University e press, 2008.
  • Tom Roberts, Ellis Rowan, and the Struggle for Australian Art at the Great Exhibitions 1880 and 1888’ in K. Darian-Smith, R. Gillespie, C. Jordan and E. Willis,, Seize the Day: Australia, Exhibitions and the World, Monash e-press, 2008.
  • ‘Buying in the Boom: George Folingsby and Victoria’s Nineteenth-century Regional Art Galleries’, Art and Australia. Vol. 45, no.3: 459-463, 2008.
  • Feeling your way: inside landscape’, Marian Drew: Photographs and Video Works, Queensland Centre for Photography, 2006.
  •  ‘Mrs MacPherson in the “Blacks’ Camp” and other Australian Interludes: A Scottish Lady Artist’s Tour in New South Wales in 1856-7’ in Jordana Pomeroy (ed.), Intrepid Women: Victorian Women Artists Travel, Ashgate, Aldershot UK, 2005.
  • Fletcher’s of Collins Street: Melbourne’s Leading Nineteenth-century Art Dealer, Alexander Fletcher’, Latrobe Journal, no. 75: Autumn: 77-93, 2005.
  • ‘Progress versus the Picturesque: White Women and the Aesthetics of Environmentalism in Colonial Australia 1820-60’, Art History, 25 (3), September: 341-57, 2002.

Dr Robert Kenny

Books
  • The Lamb Enters the Dreaming: Nathanael Pepper & the Ruptured World, Scribe Publications, Melbourne, 2007. 
    Winner of the Australian Historical Association’s W. K. Hancock Prize 2008;
    Winner the Victorian Premier’s First Book of History Award 2008
    Short-listed, the 2008 Adelaide Festival Literature Award (non-fiction) Commended in the Victorian Community History Awards
Articles and Papers
  • 'Tricks or Treats?: the case for Kulin knowledge in Batman’s Treaty', forthcoming History Australia.
  • 'The Moravian Charles Joseph La Trobe', The 2006 AGL Shaw Lecture, La Trobeana, 6:3, November 2007, 7-16.
  • 'From the Curse of Ham to the Curse of Nature: the Influence of Natural Selection on the Debate on Human Unity before the publication of the Descent of Man', The British Journal for the History of Science, 40:3, September 2007, 367-388.
  • 'La Trobe, Lake Boga and the "Enemy of Souls": The First Moravian Mission in Australia', The La Trobe Journal, 71, 2003, pp. 97-113.
  • '"In These Last Dayes": The Strange Work of Abiezer Coppe', The Seventeenth Century, XIII.2 1998, pp. 156-184.
  • ' “Gerald Murnane’s Travels into Regions Assumed to be Known' in John Hanrahan and John McLaren, eds, Gerald Murnane: Footprint New Writers 2, Melbourne 1987 pp. 23-41.
  • 'A Secret Australia: On the Poetry of Ken Taylor' in Ken Taylor, A Secret Australia: New and Collected Poems, Melbourne 1985, pp. 85-96.

An overview of Robert’s literary publications can be found under his listing on the AustLit database.


Professor Diane Erica Kirkby

Selected Publications include
  • Voices From the Ships: Australia's Seafearers and Their Union, UNSW Press, 2008
  • Co-editor with Tanja Luckins, Dining on Turtles; Food Feasts and Drinking in History, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
  • Alice Henry: The Power of Pen and Voice: The Life of an Australian-American Labor Reformer, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1991. Alice Henry was the winner of the WK Hancock Prize, 1995.
  • Barmaids: A History of Women's Work in Pubs [1790-1990s], Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1997.
  • Editor of Sex, Power and Justice: Historical Perspectives on Law in Australia, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Co-Editor of Law History Colonialism: The Reach of Empire, Manchester, Manchester University Press, and N.Y. Palgrave, 2001.
  • Dealing With Difference: Essays in Gender, History and Culture, Melbourne, Melbourne University, 1997.
Recent articles include
  • From Wharfie Haunt to Foodie Haven: Modernity and Law in Changes to the Australian Working Class Pub, Food Culture and Society, Vol. 11, No. 1, pp.30-48, 2008.

Professor Marilyn Lake

Recent books include
  • Drawing the Global Colour Line: White Men’s Countries and the International Campaign for Racial Equality co-authored with Henry Reynolds, and jointly published by Cambridge University Press ( UK) and Melbourne University Press  (Australia, 2008). Awarded the Queensland Premier’s prize for History, 2008. 
  • Connected Worlds: History in Transnational Perspective, co-edited with Ann Curthoys ( ANU ePress, 2006).
  • Memory, Monuments and Museums, ( Melbourne University Press, 2006).
  • FAITH: Faith Bandler Gentle Activist ( Allen and Unwin, 2002). Awarded the HREOC prize for non-fiction, 2002.
  • Getting Equal: The History of Australian Feminism ( Allen and Unwin, 1999).
  • Creating a Nation, co-authored with Patricia Grimshaw, Ann McGrath and Marian Quartly, Penguin, 1994,1996,2000. Awarded HREOC prize for non-fiction, 1994. Short-listed Adelaide Writers’ Festival Prize, 2006. New edition 2007.
Recent book chapters include
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Woman, Black, Indigenous: Recognition Struggles in Dialogue’ in Barbara Hobson ed. Recognition Struggles and Social Movements Contested Identities, Power and Agency Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (UK), 2003.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘On Being a White Man, Australia, c.1901’ in  Hsu Ming Teo and Richard White eds. Australian Cultural History University of NSW Press, Sydney, 2003 .
  • Marilyn Lake ‘History and Nation’ in Robert Manne ed. Whitewash, Black Inc, Melbourne, 2003.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Translating Needs into Rights: The Discursive Imperative of the Australian White Man 1901-1930’ in Stefan Dudink, Karen Hagemann and John Tosh eds. Masculinities in Politics and War: Gendering Modern History Manchester University Press, 2004.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Fellow Feeling: A Transnational Perspective on Conceptions of Civil Society and Citizenship in “White Men’s Countrries”, 1890-1910’ in Karen Hagemann, Sonya Michel and Gunilla Budde eds. Civil Society, Public Sphere and Gender Justice Historical and Comparative Perspectives  Berghahn Publishers, Oxford and New York, 2008.
  • Marilyn Lake 'White Man's Country: Locating Australia in the world', Making Australian History: Perspectives on the Past Since 1788, Ed(s). Deborah Gare and David Ritter, Australia, Thomson, 2008
Recent journal articles include
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Citizenship as Non-Discrimination: Acceptance or Assimilationism? Political Logic and Emotional Investment in Campaigns for Aboriginal Rights in Australia, 1940 to 1970’ Gender and History Special Issue: Gender, Citizenships and Subjectivities (USA) 13,3, November 2001, pp.566-592.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘White Man’s Country: The Trans-National History of a National Project’ Australian Historical Studies 122, October 2003, pp. 346-363.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘The White Man under Siege: New Histories of Race in the Nineteenth Century and the Advent of White Australia’ History Workshop Journal  ( UK) 58, 2004, pp.41-62.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘ “The brightness of eyes and quiet assurance which seem to say American”: Alfred Deakin’s identification with republican manhood’ Australian Historical Studies, 2007.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Nationalist Historiography, feminist scholarship and the promise and problems of new transnational histories: the Australian case’ Journal of Women’s History ( USA), 2007.
  • Marilyn Lake and Vanessa Pratt ‘ “ Blood Brothers”: Racial Identification and the Right to Rule’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, April, 2008.
  • Marilyn Lake ‘Equality and Exclusion: The Racial Constitution of Colonial Liberalism’ Thesis Eleven, October, 2008.
  • Marilyn Lake Cosmopolitan Colonials: Chinese Australians and Human Rights, Agora, Vol. 29, No. 3, 2008.
  • Marilyn Lake Mrs Ternente Cooke Makes History: Australian Feminism's Shifting Attitudes to the Question of 'Race', Victorian Historical Journal, Vol. 79, No. 2, 2008.

Dr Timothy Minchin

Selected publications include
Books

  • From Rights to Economics: The Ongoing Struggle for Black Equality in the U.S. South (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2007)
  • Fighting Against the Odds: A History of Southern Labor Since World War II, Gainesville, University Press of Florida, 2005. (Selected as an 'Outstanding Academic Title' by Choice Magazine, 2005)
  • ‘Don't Sleep With Stevens!': The J.P. Stevens Campaign and the Struggle to Organize the South, 1963-80, Gainesville, University Press of Florida, 2005.
  • Forging a Common Bond: Labor and Environmental Activism in the BASF Lockout, Gainesville, University Press of Florida, 2003.
  • The Color of Work: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Southern Paper Industry, 1945-1980, Chapel Hill and London, University of North Carolina Press, 2001.
  • Hiring the Black Worker: The Racial Integration of the Southern Textile Industry, 1960-1980, Chapel Hill and London, University of North Carolina Press, 1999. (Winner of the 1999 Richard A. Lester Prize, awarded by Princeton University).
  • What Do We Need a Union For?: The TWUA in the South, 1945-1955, Chapel Hill and London, University of North Carolina Press, 1997.
Major Articles
  • “Making Best Use of the New Laws: The NAACP and the Fight for Civil Rights in the South, 1965-1975,” Journal of Southern History 74:3 (August 2008), pp. 669-702.
  • One America?: Church Burnings and Perceptions of Race Relations in the Clinton Years, Australasian Journal of American Studies, Vol. 27, No. 2,(2008) pp.1-28.
  • An Uphill Fight: Ernest F. Hollings and the Struggle to Protect the South Carolina Textile Industry, 1959-2005, South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 109, No. 3, 2008, pp.187-211
  • “Beyond the Dominant Narrative: The Ongoing Struggle for Civil Rights in the U.S. South, 1968-1980,” Australasian Journal of American Studies 25:1 (July 2006), pp.65-86.
  • "The Milledgeville Spy Case and the Struggle to Organize J.P. Stevens," Georgia Historical Quarterly 90:1 (Spring 2006), pp.96-122.
  • " 'Don't Sleep With Stevens!': The J.P. Stevens Boycott and Social Activism in the 1970s," Journal of American Studies 39:3 (2005), pp.511-543.
  • “ ‘A Brand New Shining City’: Floyd B. McKissick Sr. and the Struggle to Build Soul City, North Carolina,” North Carolina Historical Review 82:2 (April 2005), pp.1-31.
  • “Organizing a Labor Law Violator: The J.P. Stevens Campaign and the Struggle to Unionize the US South, 1963-1983,” International Review of Social History 50 (2005), pp.27-51.
  • " 'It tears the heart right out of you': Memories of Striker Replacement at International Paper Company in De Pere, Wisconsin, 1987-88,” Oral History Review 31:2 (Summer-Fall 2004), pp.1-27.
  • "Permanent Replacements and the Breakdown of the 'Social Accord' in Calera, Alabama, 1974-1999", Labor History 41:4 (November 2001), pp.371-96.
  • "Broken Spirits: Permanent Replacements and the Rumford Strike of 1986", New England Quarterly 74:1 (March 2001), pp.5-31.
  • " 'There Were Two Job in St. Joe Paper Company, Black Job and a White Job': The Struggle for Civil Rights in a North Florida Paper Mill Community, 1938-1990", Florida Historical Quarterly 78:3 (Winter 2000), pp.331-59. (Winner of the 2000 Alfred W. Thompson Prize for the best article published in the Florida Historical Quarterly over the previous year).
  • "Torn Apart: Permanent Replacements and the Crossett Strike of 1985", Arkansas Historical Quarterly 59:1 (Spring 2000), pp.30-58.
  • "Black Activism, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, and the Racial Integration of the Southern Textile Industry", Journal of Southern History 65:4 (November 1999), pp.809-44.
  • "Federal Policy and the Integration of Southern Industry, 1961-1980", Journal of Policy History 11:2 (Spring 1999), pp.147-78.
  • " 'Color Means Something': Black Pioneers, White Resistance, and Interracial Unionism in the Southern Textile Industry, 1957-1980", Labor History 39:2 (June 1998), pp.143-67. (Winner of the prize for the best article published in Labor History in 1998).

Dr Adelina Modesti

Book
  • Elisabetta Sirani. Una Virtuosa del Seicento bolognese (Donne nell’Arte, I), Editrice Compositori, Bologna, 2004
Book chapters and articles
  • “Patrons as Agents and Artists as Dealers in Seicento Bologna”, in The Art Market in Italy: 15th – 17th centuries, eds. Marcello Fantoni, Louisa Matthew, Sara Matthews-Grieco, Istituto di Studi Rinascimentali, Ferrara (Saggi), Franco Cosimo Panini Editore, Modena, 2003, pp. 367- 388.
  • “Alcune riflessioni sulle opere grafiche della pittrice Elisabetta Sirani nelle raccolte dell’ Archiginnasio”, L’Archiginnasio. Bolletino della biblioteca comunale di Bologna, Anno 2001, xcvi, pp. 151-215 (by invitation from the editor, Dr. Pierangelo Bellettini, Director of the Archiginnasio).
  • “The making of a Cultural Heroine: Elisabetta Sirani, ‘Pittrice celebrissima’ of  Bologna (1638 - 1665)”, in Per l’arte. Da Venezia all’Europa. Studi in onore di Giuseppe Maria Pilo, eds. Mario Piantoni, Laura De Rossi, 2 vols, Edizioni della Laguna, Monfalcone-Gorizia, 2001, vol. 2, pp. 399 - 404, 655. [special issue of Arte /Documento Liber Extra VII].
  • “Elisabetta Sirani ‘Pittrice Eroina’: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman”, in Identità ed appartanenza: Donne e relazioni di genere dal mondo classico all’età contemporanea (Acts of the First International Congress of the Italian Society of Women Historians, University of Bologna, Rimini, June 1995), ed. M. Palazzi, Eurocopy, Bologna 1995, Vol. 3, pp. 745-768.
  • “Modernism and the Australian Women Artist”, additional chapter to Australian Art Section of Art in Diversity, B Hoffert, H Bak, J Wingate, A Modesti, 2nd revised edition, Longmans Cheshire, Melbourne, 1995, pp. 254-261.
Other
  • Eight catalogue entries on Elisabetta Sirani, Giovanni Andrea Sirani and Artemisia Gentileschi in J. Bentini & G. Cammarota (eds.), Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna. Catalogo Generale. Il Seicento: gli Incaminati, Reni, Guercino, la scuola Bolognese, Marsilio, Venice, 2008 (in press)  
  • “Elisabetta Sirani”, critical essay in Dictionary of Women Artists, ed. Delia Gaze, 2 vols., Fitzroy Dearborn, London and Chicago, 1997, vol. 2, pp.1272-1275 (republished in the 2001 edition, Concise Dictionary of Women Artists, pp. 616-619).

Dr Jennifer Ridden

Selected Publications

  • ‘The Limerick gentry: competition, defence and reform after the 1798 Rebellion, in Gearoid OTuathaigh, Liam Irwin, & Matthew Potter (eds), Limerick: history and society: interdisciplinary essays on the history of an Irish county (Dublin, Geography Publications, 2008) – Irish ‘County History & Society’ series

    ‘The forgotten history of the Protestant Crusade: religious liberalism in Ireland’, Journal of Religious History (special issue in memory of Prof Patrick O’Farrell and Tony Cahill) vol.31, no.1 (Feb 2007), pp. 78-102.
  • ‘Ireland’ (6,000 words) in Mary Spongberg, Barbara Caine, and Ann Curthoys (eds), Companion to Women’s Historical Writing, Palgrave, London, 2005, pp. 264-275.
  • ‘Britishness as an imperial and diasporic identity’, in Peter Gray (ed), Victoria’s Ireland? Irishness and Britishness 1837-1901, Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2004, pp. 88-105.
  • ‘Irish Reform between the 1798 Rebellion and the Great Famine’, in Joanna Innes and Arthur Burns (eds), Re-Thinking the Age of Reform, Cambridge University Press and Past & Present Publications, Cambridge, 2003, pp. 271-294.

Forthcoming
  • “Making Good Citizens”: Irish Elite Approaches to Empire, National Identity and Citizenship, Past & Present monograph series, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (forthcoming).

Dr Robert Robertson

Books
  • The Contemporary Era: An Introductory History. Suva: USP, 1984, 292 pp.
    The Making of the Modern World. London & New Jersey: Zed Books, 1986: 212 pp.
  • Fiji: Shattered Coups. Sydney: Pluto Press, 1988: 198 pp (with A. Tamanisau).
    Multiculturalism & Reconciliation in an Indulgent Republic: Fiji after the Coups. 1987-1998. Suva: Fiji Institute of Applied Studies, 1998: 260 pp.
    Government by the Gun: The Unfinished Business of Fiji's 2000 Coup, Sydney: Pluto Press, 2001. [Also published by Zed Books (London & New Jersey)] with William Sutherland.
  • The Three Waves of Globalization: A History of a Developing Global Consciousness. London & New York: Zed Books, 2003. [Also published by Fernwood (Nova Scotia, 2003), and as Tres Olas de Globalizaciбn: Historia de Una Conciencia Global. Madrid: Alianza Editorial, 2005.]
    Livelihoods & Identity in Fiji (ed.), Suva, University of the South Pacific, 2006.
Selected Articles since 1990
  • "Natives in a Straitjacket," Journal of Pacific History, Canberra, 25 (1990).
  • "Pacific Overview: Not So New World Order," in D. Robie (ed.), Tu Galala: Social Change in the Pacific, Wellington, Bridget Williams Books, May 1993.
  • "Fiji's Garment Led Export Industrialization Strategy", Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, Boulder, 25 (2: 1993).
  • “Pathway to Modernization: Fiji’s Garment Revolution”, in BV Lal and H Nelson (eds), Lines Across the Sea, Brisbane, Pacific History Association, 1995.
  • “Retreat from Exclusion: Identities in Postcoup Fiji” in Haroon Akram-Lodhi (ed.), Confronting Futures in Fiji, Canberra: ANU: Asia-Pacific Press, 2000.
  • "The Historical Context & Significance of Globalization", Development & Change, Oxford: Blackwell, 35 (3: 2004).
  • “Globalization & World History”, Historically Speaking, Bulletin of the Historical Society, Boston University, 5 (6: July-August 2004).
  • “Modernization”, “Dependency” and “Neocolonialism”, in M. Griffiths (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of International Relations & Global Politics. London: Routledge, 2005.
  • “Strengthening Regional Cooperation through Enhanced Engagement with Civil Society”, with S. Sutherland, M. Koloamatangi, and T. Kabutaulaka, Suva: PIAS-DG, USP, 2005.
  • “The Pacific Plan as a development strategy”, Development Bulletin, 70: April 2006.
  • “Political Economy Survey of Fiji: Fiji-Futuring: Connectivity and Development”, Pacific Economic Bulletin, Canberra, 21: 2, 2006.
  • Utilizing Economic Integration for Reform: Opportunities and Dangers”, The Asia Pacific Economic Journal, 4: 2 (March 2007).
  • “Elections and Nation Building: The Long Road since 1970” in J. Fraenkel & S. Firth (eds), From Election to Coup in Fiji: the 2006 Campaign and its Aftermath. Suva & Canberra, Institute of Pacific Studies & Asia Pacific Press, 2007.
  • “The Pacific Plan & Labour Mobility”, in Prasad B & Roy KC  (eds), Development Problems and Prospects in Pacific Island States, New York, Nova Science, 2007, pp. 23-30.
  • “Ethnicity, Development & Coups: a History of Postcolonial Frustration” in B.V. Lal & G. Chand (eds) 1987 And All That: Fiji Twenty Years Later, Lautoka, FIAS, 2008.
  • “Coups & Development: The more things change the more they stay the same”, in B.V. Lal & G. Chand (eds) 1987 And All That: Fiji Twenty Years Later, Lautoka, FIAS, 2008.

Dr Patrick Wolfe

Publications relevant to his current research include
  • ‘Nation and MiscegeNation: Discursive Continuity in the Post-Mabo Era’, Social Analysis, 34, 1994: 93-152.
  •  ‘History and Imperialism: A Century of Theory, from Marx to Postcolonialism’, American Historical Review, 102, 1997: 388-420.
  • ‘Should the Subaltern Dream? “Australian Aborigines” and the Problem of Ethnographic Ventriloquism’, in Humphreys, S. (ed.), Cultures of Scholarship (Ann Arbor, Michigan UP, 1997): 57-96.
  • Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology (London; Cassell, 1999).
  • 'Land, Labor, and Difference: Elementary Structures of Race' (American Historical Review Forum Essay for 2001), American Historical Review, 106 (2001): 866-905.
  • 'Race and Racialisation: Some Thoughts', Postcolonial Studies, 5 (2002): 51-62.
  • 'Can the Muslim Speak? An Indebted Critique', History and Theory, 41 (2002): 367-80.
  • ‘The World of History and the World-as-History: twentieth-century theories of imperialism’, in Duara, P. (ed.), Decolonization: Perspectives from now and then (New York, Routledge, 2004): 101-117.
  • ‘Race and Citizenship’, Organization of American Historians Magazine of History, 18, 5 (2004): 66-71.
  •  ‘Islam, Europe and Indian Nationalism: towards a postcolonial transnationalism’, in Curthoys, A., and M. Lake (eds), Connected Worlds: History in Transnational Perspective (Canberra, ANU E-Press, 2005): 233-65.
  • ‘Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native’, Journal of Genocide Research, 8 (2006): 387-410.
  • Corpus Nullius: The exception of Indians and other aliens in US constitutional discourse’, Postcolonial Studies, 10 (2007): 127-51.
  • ‘Palestine, Project Europe and the (un-)making of the new Jew. In memory of Edward W. Said’, in Curthoys, N. and D. Ganguly (eds), Edward Said: The legacy of a public intellectual (Melbourne UP, 2007): 312-37.
  •  ‘Structure and Event: Settler Colonialism, Time, and the Question of Genocide’, in Moses, A.D. (ed.), Empire, Colony, Genocide (New York, Berghahn, 2008): 102-132.

Dr Shannon Woodcock

  • Dikature pa Humor - Mungesa e Barcaletave Shqiptare per Socializmin, Polis, Vol. 5 pp.65-76 (2008).
  • The Tigan Others as catalyst for the creation of Modern Romani, Annual Journal of the Centre for Roma Studies, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp.41-72 (2008).
  • “Romanian Romani Resistance to Genocide in the Matrix of the Tigan Other” Anthropology of East Europe Review Vol.26 (1) (2007).
  • “The Absence of Albanian Jokes about Socialism, Or Why Some Dictatorships Are Not Funny,” in The Politics and Aesthetics of Refusal, edited by Caroline Hamilton, Will Noonan, Michelle Kelly, and Elcine Mines, Cambridge Scholars Press, (2007).
  • ‘Romania and Europe: Roma, Rroma and Ţigani as sites for the contestation of ethno-national identity’, Patterns of Prejudice,Vol. 41 no.5 (2007).
  • “Romanian Women’s Discourses of Sexual Violence: Othered Ethnicities and Gendering Spaces,” in Living Gender after Communism, edited by Janet Elise Johnson and Jean C. Robinson, Indiana University Press, 2007.
  • “Huliganizarea istoriei Romaniei” (The Hooligan-ization of Romanian History), in Revista 22, No. 848 (June 2006)
  • “Spatiul Public si discursuri de violenta sociale dintre femeile in Bucuresti” (Public Space and Discourses of Social Violence Amongst Women in Bucharest), in Concepturi de femeile in Istorie de Romania, Editura Noua, Bucharest, 2004.
  • “The Globalisation of Sexuality,” in Gender and the (Post) East-West Divide, edited by Mihaela Frunza and Theodora-Eliza Vacarescu, Lines Publishing House, 2004.

 

Dr Clare Wright

Selected publications
Books
  • Beyond the Ladies Lounge: Female Publicans in Australia, Melbourne University Publishing, 2003.
Book Chapters and articles
  • “Labour Pains: A female perspective on the birth of democracy”, in Alan Mayne (ed.), Eureka 1854-2004: Reappraising an Australian Legend, Curtin University Books, forthcoming.
  • 'The Eureka Stockade: An Alternative Portrait', Making Australian History: Perspectives on the Past Since 1788, Ed(s). Deborah Gare and David Ritter, Australia, Thomson, 2008, pp. 213-221.
  • ‘’Doing the Beans’: Women, Community and Drinking in the Ladies Lounge, 1925-1975’, New Talents 21C – Voicing Dissent, special issue of Journal of Australian Studies, vol 76, 2003, pp.7-17.
  • ‘Of Private Lives and Public Houses: Female Publicans as Domestic Entrepreneurs’, Australian Historical Studies, vol. 116, April 2001, pp.57-75.
  • ‘Why Fanny Power, Ida Beer and Susan Hussey Didn’t Join the VULVA: The Politics of Pub-lic Housekeeping’ in Chris McConville and Lynette Finch (eds), Images of the Urban: Conference Proceedings, Sunshine Coast University Press, 1999, pp.217-221.

Scholarly articles
  • Clare Wright, “Golden Opportunities: The Early Origins of Women’s Suffrage in Victoria”, Victorian Historical Journal, vol. 79, no. 2, November 2008, 1-13.
  • Clare Wright, “’New Brooms They Say Sweep Clean’: Women’s Political Activism on the Ballarat Goldfields, 1854”, Australian Historical Studies, 39, 2008, 305-321.
  • Clare Wright, “The Eureka Stockade: An Alternative Portrait”, in Deborah Gare and David Ritter (eds), Making Australian History: Perspectives on the Past Since 1788, Melbourne, Thomson, 2008, 213-218.
  • Clare Wright, “Labour Pains: Towards a Female Perspective on the Birth of Australian  Democracy”, in Alan Mayne (ed), Eureka: Reappraising an Australian Legend, Perth, Network Books, 2006, 123-143.
Select Journalism

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