29 November 2006
NEW PUBLICATION - First International Conference of Asian Queer Studies proceedings now online
It features articles by conference presenters, including both papers presented at the conference and new work. This issue also contains reviews of twelve recent works in the field of Asian Queer Studies, as well as arts reviews and poetry.
Next year’s “Queer Asian Sites Conference” (UTS, Sydney; 22-23 Feb 2007) is supported by the Cultural Research Network. The event is organised by AsiaPacifiQueer members Mark McLelland, Fran Martin and Audrey Yue.
RESEARCH DATABASE - The Cronulla riots and their aftermath
You are invited to contribute to an informal research database focusing on the Cronulla riots and their aftermath.
The Centre for Research on Social Inclusion at Macquarie University has been invited to compile this research database by a consortium of government and community services providers working in the Sutherland Shire. These include the Community Relations Commission For a multicultural NSW, Shire Wide Youth Services and Sutherland Shire Council.
This has established a Research Steering Committee, in which CRSI participates as the academic partner. The Committee has identified the need for cutting-edge research to be made available to those who are working on the ground in Cronulla, in the belief that their work could benefit from the insights of academic researchers and other experts.
We are therefore seeking to establish a comprehensive database of all research that has been undertaken, or that is currently being undertaken, on the causes and impacts the Cronulla riots, and on ways to address the aftermath of those riots. We are interested in research from both the academic and community sectors.
The database will include both synopses (250 words up to one A4 page) and where possible electronic copies of the following kinds of works:
- In-progress and completed research projects
- Planned research, including proposed research projects for which funds have been applied, but the funding outcome is not yet known
- Published and unpublished reports
- Published and unpublished papers of any kind (eg conference papers, seminar papers, journal articles, book chapters)
- Reports and papers that are works in progress, abstracts, outlines of projects, etc.
- Evaluations of community intervention projects related to the Cronulla riots
- Community surveys of any kind (from the academic and community sectors) related to the riots
We would like to invite you to provide us with any of the above, or other, kinds of research that you may be involved in or aware of. We would also like to ask if you could kindly forward this email to your colleagues.
Please note that the references and works will be uploaded onto a secure password protected intranet that will be accessible only to a small circle of practitioners involved in government and community services dealing with the impact of the riots. The intranet is being developed by the Centre for Research on Social Inclusion.
The use of password protected intranet will ensure that any works in progress or unpublished works are kept confidential. Unpublished work will only be quoted or used formally with the permission of the author.
The research will be used solely to assist the participating community organisations to gain a greater insight into the causes and impacts of the riots; to help them plan intervention projects; and to develop appropriate policy responses.
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Dr Amanda Wise, who is leading this project, on Amanda.wise@scmp.mq.edu.au
Please make submissions by email to me at crsi@scmp.mq.edu.au
Thanking you.
Yours sincerely,
Dr Armen Gakavian - Centre Manager
Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, Macquarie University, NSW
Email: crsi@scmp.mq.edu.au
http://www.crsi.mq.edu.au
24 November 2006
CFP - Visualising Childhoods (2-day symposium in April 2007; ANU, ACT)
In April 2007, the ANU Research School for the Humanities proposes to hold a 2-day symposium on "Visualising Childhoods" convened by ARC Professorial Fellow, David McDougall.
The Symposium will explore the ways in which children and childhood are represented in visual media, how visual media can be used in childhood research, and some of the practical, theoretical, and ethical questions raised by both activities. We invite scholars in the wide variety of disciplines interested in this topic to propose papers and presentations for the symposium, which may include the use of film, video, artwork, and still photography.
Some of the areas in which we would be glad to receive proposals are:
- Studies of the representation of children in films, photography, television, and advertising, historically and in the present
- Recent uses of film, video, and photography in child-focused social research
- Historical uses of film and photography in childhood research (e.g. Bateson & Mead's 1936 project on Balinese character development)
- Studies of the uses of visual media in advocacy on behalf of children (e.g. Lewis Hine's child labour photography, studies of children in war, etc.)
- Children's own creative use of visual media, and research based on studies of this work
22 November 2006
VISITING FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM - Humanities Research Centre, ANU (Closing date: 5 Jan 2007)
Applications are particularly welcomed from scholars with interests in one or more of the HRC's Research Platforms:
Applications for fellowships to the Freilich Foundation to work in the area of bigotry and tolerance are also welcomed.
The Freilich Foundation exists for the study of, and research into, the causes, the histories and the effects of ethnic, cultural, religious and sexual bigotry and animosity, and the exploration of how such intolerance can be combated - and co-existence promoted - by educational and social programs. Formally established in July 1999, and part of the Humanities Research Centre of ANU, the Freilich Foundation supports individual research and runs a range of lectures, conferences and seminars. The Foundation also runs a range of activities to support schools, including a biennial summer school. In 2008 the Foundation will be involved with the Recovering Lives conference and the Limits of Being Human conference.
List of 2008 HRC Conferences and their descriptions are available HERE.
The HRC will fund a number of short-term Visiting Fellows (of up to 12 weeks) to take up residence at the HRC. The Freilich Foundation will fund a few scholars (up to 12 weeks).
Scholars usually concentrate upon a particular Research Platform, although we also welcome non-thematic scholars.
FORMS (MS-Word documents):
- Application forms for HRC 2008 Visiting Fellowships
- Referees Comment Form
- 2008 Visiting Fellows Guidelines
SCHOLARSHIP - PhD research scholarship, Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, Macquarie U, Sydney (Closing date: 11 Dec 2006)
A Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship is available in the Centre for Research on Social Inclusion for a PhD project based in the centre’s Migration, Multiculturalism and Nation cluster. The PhD topic is open but will fall within one of the following areas of research strength:
- Migrant, diasporic, or transnational communities.
- Multiculturalism, racism / anti-racisms, inter-ethnic relations, living with difference.
The scholarship pays a living allowance currently $19,231 per annum, tax exempt (2006) and the tenure is 3.5 years full time subject to satisfactory progress. Tuition fees will be funded for the scholarship tenure with domestic students receiving RTS placement for their research degree tuition and International award holders having their fees sponsored.
Further information on the research area may be obtained by emailing the project supervisor Dr Amanda Wise on amanda.wise@mq.edu.au or phoning (02) 9850 8835. Dr Wise’s research profile and more details on the centre can be found at www.crsi.mq.edu.au.
Application forms, and conditions for MQRES awards, are available from the Higher Degree Research Unit by phoning (02) 9850 7663, by e-mailing pgschol@mq.edu.au, or by downloading from http://research.mq.edu.au/students/scholarships.
Applications should be forwarded to:
The Scholarship Officer
Higher Degree Research Unit
Cottage C4C
Macquarie University
NSW 2109
Closing Date: Monday 11th December 2006
16 November 2006
EXHIBITION - "the other APT" (1 Dec 2006 - 23 Jan 2007; Brisbane, QLD)
Opening 1 December, 2006 -> 7pm til late
the other APT explores issues for “ Australia’s” Native peoples and our role in the Asia Pacific Region, and also deals with the issues of migration of our neighbours including the importance of Place, Legend, Identity, Politics and Mutual Respect in the interest and importance of open Art Dialogue.
The exhibition will feature exceptional works from Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Melanesian, Polynesian, Maori & Asian Artists based in Australia , commenting on the complexity of the here and now and providing refreshing alternative perspectives.
the other APT will coincide with the Asia Pacific Triennial at the Queensland Art Gallery, and is situated just around the corner.
Join us for a free opening program from 7pm featuring MC Brett Button, Indidge-n-art, Sarah Patrick, the Torres Strait Islander Dancers, Polytoxic, Ann Fuata, Tauline Virtue and more special guests.
Artists' Talks:
- Thursday 30 November, 3pm: Charles Street , Paul Bong, Mayu Kanamori
- Wednesday 6 December, 3pm: Christine Christophersen, Ann Fuata, Ritchie Ares Dona
- Thursday 7 December, 3pm: Jo-anne Driessens, Chantal Fraser & Polytoxic, Maia
Critique:
- Tuesday 5 December, 3pm: with Giles Petersen, Curator based in Aotearoa, NZ
Directions:
Catch the Train in – get off at South Brisbane Station, it’s just nearby. Raw Space Galleries is across the road from the Fox Hotel & the Brisbane Convention Centre.
Keep an eye out for updates on the website:
http://www.fineartforum.org/Gallery/cybertribe/other_apt
the other APT -> from the others, for the others
CALL for BOOK CHAPTERS: Diasporas of Australian Cinema (Deadline: 31 Dec 2006)
All proposals received by 31 December 2006 will be considered. If you would like to ask further questions, do not hesitate to contact us at the e-mail addresses given above.
CFP (Final) - OURMedia Conference (10-13 April 2007; Sydney, NSW)
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
Sydney, Australia – April 10-13, 2007
www.ourmedia07.net
Sustainable Futures: Roles & Challenges for Community, Alternative and Citizens’ Media in the 21st Century
EXTENSION OF DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS AND EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST UNTIL NOVEMBER 20
CONFERENCE TOPICS AND STREAMS:
- Community Media Research
- Participation and Social Change
- Community Media and Policy
- Media Activism /Civil Society /Social Movements
- Local Culture /Media Diversity
- New Technologies / Media Convergence
- Community and Public Access Broadcasting
- Indigenous Media, Aboriginal Media
- Young People and Grass-Roots Communication
A network of alternative, community & citizens media research and practice http://www.ourmedianet.org
14 November 2006
PROGRAM - Asialink Leaders Program 2007 - Deadline 15 Dec 2006
The 2007 Asialink Leaders Program skills emerging leaders across all sectors to manage successfully across cultures and borders. The program draws on the expertise of Australia's leading Asia institutions at the Australian National University, The University of Melbourne and University of Technology Sydney and includes high level speakers from government, business, media and the not for profit sector.
United Group Learning, with unrivaled experience and expertise in cross-cultural management, is a key partner in program design and delivery.
A new modularised approach provides program participants with increased flexibility. The program will be delivered in both Melbourne and Sydney consecutively.
More information: http://www.asialink.unimelb.edu.au/cpp/leadership
Download a brochure: http://www.asialink.unimelb.edu.au/cpp/pdf/AsialinkLeadershipProgram.pdf (PDF, 416kb)
Enquiries: Yue Li, 03 8344 3574 (direct), leadership@asialink.unimelb.edu.au
Deadline: Friday 15 December 2006
CONFERENCE - Japan Relates: Australia, Asia, The World (9-13 Dec 2006; Broome, WA)
The Monash University Japanese Studies Centre celebrates the Australia-Japan year of exchange with a conference in Broome, Western Australia
9 - 13 December 2006 Cable Beach Club Resort, Broome
Visit the CONFERENCE WEBSITE
The conference will engage in a high level of discussion about the future of Japanese Studies in the context of Australia-Japan relations and the expanding role of those two nations in Asia. The conference will address the following themes:
- Australia-Japan relations in the context of a globalizing Asia
- Japanese Studies in the post-area studies era
- Changing goals of Japanese language education
- Japanese critical cultural studies
- Japanese communities in Australia
- Japanese cultural flows in Australia and Asia
- Translating Japan and Japanese for Asia and Australia
- Australia-Japan: From maritime connectivity to digital connectivity
For further information, contact Joanne.Witheridge@arts.monash.edu.au
The conference is sponsored by The Japan Foundation.
VISITING PROFESSORSHIP - University of Tokyo (Australian Studies) - Closing date 15 Dec 2006
The University of Tokyo, one of the most prestigious tertiary institutions in Japan, has a long-standing commitment to the study of Australia and has for many years hosted Australian academics. The University, with assistance from the Australia-Japan Foundation, created the Annual Visiting Professorship in Australian Studies in 1999, and offers this Visiting Professorship to one Australian scholar per year. Applicants must be Australian citizens.
Full details about the position and how to apply can be found HERE (MS-Word file).
7 November 2006
CFP - 9th Biennial European Australian Studies Association conference (26-30 Sept 2007; Copenhagen, Denmark)
University of Roskilde and University of Copenhagen, Denmark
"Translating Cultures: Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific"
The colon is an early indicator that EASA has decided to expand its area of activity to include New Zealand and the Pacific. Translating, on the other hand, indicates a process, an open-ended attempt at conceptualising what is meant by Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Studies. This can obviously, given the location of EASA and its conferences, be done from a European perspective, but it can also be explored from within each of the nations covered by the umbrella terms, and between those nations. In other words, to discuss Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Studies is an uncontainable practice, which we perform both with an acute sense of the object at hand, but also with a hopefully equally acute sense of our own subjectivities, as academics located in very different environments, with very different agendas and demands, which our performances as academics are supposed to meet.
We invite papers working in all kinds of academic fields, from sociology, anthropology/ ethnography/ethnology, literature, geography, history, environmental studies, cultural studies, postcolonial studies and probably a few others… The very broad title of the conference is also a broad invitation to everyone working in these fields to identify themselves with the EASA network and its conferences which have developed over a substantial number of years to become the primary site for discussions of Australian Studies in Europe, and now hopefully also New Zealand and Pacific Studies. So rather than attempt to single out particular suggestions for approaches, we conclude by inviting particularly people who see themselves as working on migrancy, indigenous studies, refugees and multiculturalism (including also for example Asian-Australian Studies). The reason for particularly singling out these fields of interest, is that they speak most readily and immediately to concerns which are very much at the top of the European agenda, and as such would provide another important opportunity to show that despite the geographical remoteness of Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific, certain issues are of a global concern and reach, and constitutes a field where Europeans could meet the fellow colleagues through the prism of Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Studies.
Accompanying event:
One day immediately after the conference will be devoted to the third EASA Postgraduate Seminar, where advanced students can discuss their work with experts in their field in a lecture + workshop-format.
Conference Organisers:
- Mads Clausen, Dept. of English, Copenhagen University
- Lars Jensen, Cultural Encounters, Roskilde University, hopeless@ruc.dk
- Eva Rask Knudsen, Dept. of English, Copenhagen University
- Kirsten Holst Petersen, Depts. of Cultural Encounters and English, Roskilde University
- Stuart Ward, Dept. of English, Copenhagen University
Timetable:
- 15 January, 2007 - Email your 200 word abstracts (in an attached file) with title to Mads Clausen (mclausen@hum.ku.dk)
- 1 March, 2007 expiry of early bird registration fee
- 1 August 2007 deadline for full registration
CALL FOR SHORT FILMS and ARTICLES - An Asian Australian Occasion (May 2007; St Lucia, Qld)
THEME: ASIAN AUSTRALIAN
FORMAT:
- DVD or VHS. Duration 6 to 15 mins max. pref. Will also accept links to Internet clips (i.e. favourite You Tube) for review.
- Articles/essays in Word - 1000 - 1500 limit. "Zine" style artwork as JPGs also welcome.
EVENT: “An Asian Australian Occasion”
A Free One Day Film Festival and Panel Discussion
May 2007 @ UQ Duhig Library Conference Room
Organised by Brisbane students in association with
The Asian Australian Studies Research Network (AASRN) and
The University of Queensland Library
EVENT OUTLINE:
“An Asian Australian Occasion” will showcase a combination of panel discussions and short films that creatively construct and interrogate conceptualisations of Asian Australian culture and identities. This special one-day event also aims to promote dialogues between both senior and emerging academics, artists and activists.
The program will feature a range of films that focus on questions of belonging and mobility in the everyday lives of Asian Australians; this includes Fish Sauce Breath, Delivery Day and Chinese Take Away.
The panel discussions will be chaired by Dr Jacqueline Lo, of the ANU and the Asian Australian Studies Research Network. Other panelists include Benjamin Law (QUT), who is writing an 8-part Asian Australian sit-com, and Jen Tsen Kwok (UQ), whose research explores the political cultures and subcultures of diasporic Chinese communities in multicultural Australia. There will also be a screening of more experimental works including Sydney artist My Le Thi's PHO NOW.
A booklet featuring the program, panelist bios, short articles, plus a listing of links to notable Internet clips about Asian Australian identities is also being planned.
Volunteers for the planning committee and on the day are also needed.
Enquiries can be sent to Indigo.
AASRN PANEL - Asian = UnAustralian? Panel at the CSAA conference (Canberra, ACT; 6-8 Dec 2006)
Panel presentation by the Asian Australian Studies Research Network
Panel Chair: Dean Chan (Edith Cowan University)
Asian Australian Studies sites itself in and of Australia. The discipline interpolates Asians in Australian narratives and discourses, while drawing on contemporary Asian discourse and diasporic theory from a range of international spaces. This shift in focus and the creation of new disciplinary boundaries means that Asian Australian individuals and communities are addressed as complex hybrids with multiple cultural allegiances simultaneously located within and beyond the nation. This panel explores the challenges of locating diasporic practices and identities within the troubled and embattled battlefield of the nation.
Panel presenters:
- Jen Tsen Kwok: "The Production of Ethnic Identity and Difference in the First Speeches of Asian Australian Parliamentarians"
- Simon Choo: "Your habitus stinks! Emplacing durian through a sensory anthropology of food"
- Christine Clark: "Echoes of Home, but which one? Contemporary Art by Asian Australians"
- Jacqueline Lo: "'Queer Magic': Performing Mixed-race on the Stage"
Full information can be found on the AASRN Events page.
BOOK LAUNCH - Zhou Xiaoping and Regina Ganter (Melbourne; 14 Nov 2006)
Zhou Xiaoping's A dream of Aboriginal Australia (published in Chinese)
AND
Regina Ganter's Mixed Relations: Asian- Aboriginal Contact in North Australia
The flyer for this event is HERE.
- Introduced by Marcia Langton, Professor of Australian Indigenous Studies, University of Melbourne.
- Launched by Philip A. Kuhn, Professor of History Harvard University.
TIME/DATE: 6.30pm; Tuesday 14th November 2006
RSVP to rsvp@kazari.com.au by the 10th November 2006.
Further information
John Fitzgerald, Professor of Asian Studies
School of Social Sciences, La Trobe University
Phone: +61 3 94793017 / Fax:+61 3 94791880
FORUM - Popular culture, art and community cultural development (Footscray Community Arts Centre, Melbourne; 17 Nov 2006)
'Popular culture, art and community cultural development' forum
Artists and Community Cultural Development (CCD) workers must engage with popular culture, but doing so is fraught with tensions and dangers. To ignore it artists risk becoming irrelevant, to embrace it they risk selling out!
Writer and artist Tom Cho leads this forum, facilitated by Footscray Arts Program Coordinator David Everist, and looks at questions such as: What attention should artists pay to popular icons, idols, styles and fashions? Should CCD practice challenge popular culture and therefore exist outside of it? Can engagement with popular culture be a way into involving communities in the creative? Could that engagement lead to more subversive and broad-based arts practice?
Friday 17 November, 3pm
Gabriel Gallery
Footscray Community Arts
Centre45 Moreland Street, Footscray
A PDF flyer for the event is HERE. The forum is FREE.
For more information, phone David Everist on 03 9362 8888 or email david@footscrayarts.com
3 November 2006
PGRAD WORKSHOP - Part of AAI 2: The 2nd Asian Australian Identities Conference (27 June 2007; Melbourne, Vic)
Postgraduates will have the opportunity to present works-in-progress for focused discussion with key Asian Australian studies scholars.
Workshop numbers are limited.
Applications describing the area of research and methodology (max. 200 words) and a short bio (max. 200 words) should be sent to aasrn-events@asianaustralianstudies.org BY WEDNESDAY 31 January 2007.
Workshop enquiries should be directed to Jacqueline Lo.
=============================
The conference and workshop are initiatives of the Asian AustralianStudies Research Network, which is generously supported by theInternational Centre of Excellence in Asia-Pacific Studies (ICEAPS).
CFP - AAI 2: The 2nd Asian Australian Identities Conference (28-30 June 2007; Melbourne, Vic)
We welcome papers and presentations exploring Asian Australian identities, histories, cultures and politics.
Areas of interest include:
- Community, cultural heritage and cultural identity
- Literature, performance and film
- Visual arts and new media
- Popular culture
CONFERENCE CONVENORS:
Tseen Khoo, School of Political and Social Inquiry, Monash University, Vic
Jacqueline Lo, School of Humanities, Australian National University, ACT
=====================================
The conference and workshop are initiatives of the Asian Australian Studies Research Network, which is generously supported by the International Centre of Excellence in Asia-Pacific Studies (ICEAPS).
WORKSHOP - Transnational Dialogues on Bollywood: Australian Perspectives (30 Nov 2006; Melbourne, Vic)
Monash Conference Centre, Collins Street, Melbourne
Thursday 30 November 2006
Conveners:
Debjani Ganguly (Centre for Cross-Cultural Research, ANU)
and
Andrew Hassam (National Centre for Australian Studies, Monash University)
PDF downloads: PROGRAM = REGISTRATION = VENUE INFO
Today in countries such as Australia, the Indian film industry is best known by the label of Bollywood, a genre of popular films produced in Bombay (Mumbai) and made in Hindi. In the domain of popular and material culture, in Australia and elsewhere, Bollywood circulates as a potent aesthetic and cultural marker of Indianness. Clothes, jewellery, food, footwear and even dance fitness schools proudly wear the Bollywood label. At the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, held in March 2006, the opening ceremony featured an elaborate dance and musical ensemble on Bollywood themes. For a long time now, Bollywood films have circulated globally among the Indian and South Asian diaspora as a shared cultural idiom. They have also been immensely popular in the erstwhile Soviet Union and on the African continent. Further, in an age when creative, information and service industries propel economic growth, Bollywood and its modalities of production, distribution and reception, are seen as important players in global culture-industry networks. Countries of the developed world – Switzerland, Ireland, Netherlands, Australia, New Zealand – go out of their way to welcome Bollywood production teams to shoot in their pristine locales. Local cinema houses in Australia, US, UK and Europe regularly run shows of newly released Bollywood blockbusters. Many Hollywood producers now outsource their post-production work to Mumbai at costs lower than what they would incur in the US.
This one-day workshop brings together scholars from India and Australia to explore the transnational impact of Bollywood on public spheres around the globe and to assess its contribution to creative industries in Australia. It proposes to address the following themes, with particular reference to the Australian context:
• Transnational circulation of Bollywood as a marker of Indianness
• Bollywood as shared cultural idiom among the Indian diaspora
• Translation of Bollywood themes, genres, styles into various popular cultural forms around the world – the Melbourne Commonwealth Games, new media art, intercultural youth films
• Impact of Bollywood on material culture – food, fashion and fitness
• Production, distribution and reception of Bollywood films
• Bollywood’s contribution to creative industries
Confirmed speakers:
- Debjani Ganguly (ANU)
- Devleena Ghosh (UTS)
- Andrew Hassam (Monash University)
- Goldie Osuri (Macquarie University)
- Vijay Mishra (Murdoch University)
- NagaMallika G. (Manipal Institute of Communications, India)
- Makarand Paranjape (JNU, New Delhi, India)
- Anjali Gera Roy (IIT, Kharagpur, India)
- Anupam Sharma (Films and Casting Temple, Sydney)
Dr Andrew Hassam, National Centre for Australian Studies, Monash University
SYMPOSIUM - Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region (30 Nov - 1 Dec 2006; Melbourne, Vic)
Monash University, Caulfield campus, Melbourne 30th November and 1st December 2006
Conference Conveners:
Usha M Rodrigues, Journalism, Monash University
Dr Belinda Smaill, Visual Culture, Monash University
Symposium WEBSITE
AIMS
THEMES
- Youth consumption and production of media.
- Hybrid cultures, subcultures and issues of globalisation,
- The role of commercial media, public service broadcasting and community media.
- The impact of new media, especially the manner in which it facilitates new formations of community and identity.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
- Bill Osgerby, London Metropolitan University
- Stephanie Donald, University of Technology Sydney
- Ian Weber, Texas A&M University
CONFERENCE - Not another hijab row: New conversations on gender, race, religion and the making of communities (9-10 Dec 2006; Sydney, NSW)
Despite a decade of 'race debates' in Australia, analyses of the intersections between gender, race and religion remain all but absent in the public sphere. In recent years Muslim women in particular have been subjected to intense public scrutiny, yet these controversies have largely been limited to provocative comments on the hijab and sharia law. Such narrow debates have served to silence the experiences and the concerns of Muslim women and of scholars and community workers who engage the intersections of gender, race and religion.
This conference seeks to establish a space for constructive dialogue around the perspectives which are marginalised in public discussions, focusing on how gender, race and religion have long been deployed in the construction of Australian national identity, and are particularly evident in current representations of 'aggressive' and 'misogynistic' Islam as the ultmate alien other in 'tolerant' Judeo-Christian Australia. In minority communities, questions over community leadership, representation, and responses to racism have often revolved around constructions of culture, faith and gender roles.
The conference will provide a forum for papers and presentations from all disciplinary perspectives in order to build a conversation across spectra of belief, scholarship and community. Rather than another 'hijab debate', the conference will explore the intersections of gender, race and religion in regards to:
- public space and public safety
- health, housing and education
- security and belonging
- employment and unemployment
- social inclusion and exclusion
- media and public debate
- the dynamics of community
- the politics of representation
- advocacy and activism
- feminisms
- nationalism and national identity
- 'law and order' and representations of crime
For more information contact:
Dr. Tanja Dreher: tanja.dreher@uts.edu.au, 02 9514 2757 or
Dr. Christina Ho: christina.ho@uts.edu.au, 02 9514 1946.
Following "Not another hijab row" is The Borderpolitics of Whiteness, 11th - 13th December, 2006.
GRANT/SCHOLARSHIP - Centre for Contemporary Art & Politics - PhD funded place - COFA, UNSW
CONSTRUCTION, CONNECTION AND COMMUNITY: MEASURING ASIAN ART’S CONTRIBUTION TO CONTEMPORARY CULTURE
The project offers training in curatorial practice and the opportunity to work on exhibition projects with Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Gallery 4A and the Zendai Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai. The PhD thesis may focus on an aspect of either cross cultural curatorial practice, contemporary Asian art, diaspora/migration, contemporary theories of community, or on a theme related to the larger project.
Applicants must have a good honours degree, or Masters by Research or equivalent. Entry is by proposal.
Inquiries: A/Prof Jill Bennett, Director, CCAP <J.Bennett@unsw.edu.au>