Pursuits of Settler Belonging in Contemporary Australian Memoirs Shurlee SwainThis book examines Australian memoirs of settler belonging written by public intellectualswriters, historians, academics, journalistswhich attempt to come to terms with the history of colonial violence and dispossession of Indigenous people, and articulate new perspectives on how to belong ethically in a settler colony of the 21st century.
socially just practices
Though met with immediate scorn and mockery
hosting foreign military interventions and receiving international aid
It argues for the importance of a new literary history of the southern colonies that accounts for Indigenous
this contribution to the Fan Phenomena series covers never-before-explored topics related to The Rocky Horror Picture Show
In asserting the importance of the musical film and its relationship with a vibrant British popular music culture
It connects the intimate details of shipboard life with the high politics of imperial ocean space to present a wealth of new insights into the significance of shipping and the sea in the everyday life of colonialism
as well as for all readers of English poetry
Brit Wits shows how and why humour has been such a powerful catalyst and expressive force in rockers' work
camera to blog and artist to audience
This text draws on original in-depth interviews with people of different ages to introduce contemporary scholarship on the family and to illustrate how Irish families have adapted and changed over time
young artist and art enthusiast