[csaa-forum] Re: publications for newsletter
Maryrose Casey
maryrose.casey at uq.edu.au
Wed Sep 15 15:42:50 CST 2004
Dear Greg,
I have recently published
Casey, Maryrose. Creating Frames: Contemporary Indigenous Theatre 1967-97.
UQ Press 2004.
cheers
Maryrose Casey
Theatre and Drama
School of EMSAH
University of Queensland
Brisbane QLD 4072
(07) 3365 2184
CRICOS Provider No: 00025B
----- Original Message -----
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To: <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>
Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 12:30 PM
Subject: csaa-forum Digest, Vol 5, Issue 6
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> Today's Topics:
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> 1. FW: [csaa-forum] Fat Pizza (Jon Stratton)
> 2. Re: publications for newsletter (Catherine Speck)
> 3. RE: publications for newsletter (Grant Stone)
> 4. Re: publications for newsletter (Greg Noble)
> 5. Fwd: publications for newsletter (Greg Noble)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 10:21:22 +0800
> From: Jon Stratton <J.Stratton at curtin.edu.au>
> Subject: FW: [csaa-forum] Fat Pizza
> To: 'Jonathan Bollen ' <jbollen at pobox.une.edu.au>,
> "'csaa-forum-bounces at darlin.cdu.edu.au '"
> <csaa-forum-bounces at darlin.cdu.edu.au>, 'CSAA discussion list '
> <csaa-forum at darlin.cdu.edu.au>
> Message-ID:
> <092BF7A1BC389E489A69DC764F23CD87292B4B at exmsp2.perth.ad.curtin.edu.au>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
>
>
> Hi Jonathan,
> This review--which I have to say I haven't read--appears to
> buy into a longstanding myth that southern European cultures are more
> matriarchal than northern European cultures. I don't know the specific
> origins of this myth, or indeed if there are any, but it seems to work
> in conjunction with the racialised hierarchy within Europe that placed
> northern European culture at a higher level of civilisation to southern
> European culture. This was legitimated on a colour grading that
> considered northern Europeans more 'white' than southern Europeans. The
> civilisation assumption was, of course, that patriarchy was more
> civilised than matriarchy. This functioned in evolutionary terms where,
> for those who believed that there ever had been a matriarchy (Bachofen
> is the reference here), it was replaced by patriarchy.
> Given the 'white Australia' anxieties of the 1950s (and later!!) it
> doesn't surprise me that somewhere somebody invoked the old matriarchy
> fears. All the more because Australia has always placed women much
> lower in the social order than (even) Britain--speaking here in the
> general terms of, let us say, a cultural imaginary. If I remember this
> is a point in Summers' _Damned Whores and God's Police_.
> What the above begins to touch on is the complicated gendering of
> immigrants to Australia--this is of especial importance now in respect
> of the perceptions of 'asylum seekers.'. But I am moving away from your
> question.
> As an aside, the combination of race/ethnicity and sex, and
> sexuality (for example, the very anxious emphasis on heterosexuality),
> in Fat Pizza is certainly worth thinking about!!
> Jon
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: csaa-forum-bounces at darlin.cdu.edu.au
> To: CSAA discussion list
> Sent: 14/09/04 7:17
> Subject: [csaa-forum] Fat Pizza
>
> In a review of the film Fat Pizza, Michael Kitson asks 'So why do all
> the girls regard Fat Pizza with such horror?' and he offers the
> following answer:
>
> 'Apart from the calories, I reckon it's because although patriarchal
> Australia got a kick in the 1970s with both Germaine Greer and the
> influx of matriarchal cultures, the irony is that a matriarchy still
> lets its eldest son run wild and the daughters of these cultures have
> had enough of their pampered brothers. Spit on me if I'm wrong.' (25)
>
> Without wanting to spit on Kitson, I'm intrigued by this idea of
> immigration to Australia as an 'the influx of matriarchal cultures'
> though I'm unsure how to follow it up?
>
> I know that in Donald Horne's The Lucky Country there's reference to
> 'An American West Coast American Professor of Psychology' who
> characterised Australia as a 'matriduxy' because 'more often than not,
> Mother is the decision maker in the Australian home' (86) but then that
> hardly helps. And I don't see anything about matriarchal or patriarchal
> cultures in Ronald Taft's essay on 'The Myth and Migrants' in Peter
> Coleman's Australian Civilization which was the one place I thought
> such ideas might have played out.
>
> I'd be grateful for any ideas or suggestions for sources for what
> Kitson is on about? Perhaps I should be reading social theory from the
> 1970s or 1980s - but which?
>
> Best wishes
>
> Jonathan
>
>
> Horne, Donald (1964) The Lucky Country: Austrtalia in the sixties,
> Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
> Kitson, Michael (2003) 'Surprisingly tasty Fat Pizza', Metro, 137:
> 22-27
> Taft, Ronald (1962) 'The Myth and the Migrants' in Australian
> Civilization: A Symposium, edited by Peter Coleman, Melbourne: F.W.
> Cheshire.
>
>
> Dr Jonathan Bollen
> School of English, Communication & Theatre
> University of New England
> Armidale NSW, Australia
>
> Postal: 413 / 6 Belvoir St, Surry Hills NSW 2010, Australia
> Telephone: +61 2 9690 2846
> Mobile: +61 4 2237 6346
> Email: jbollen at pobox.une.edu.au
>
> _______________________________________
>
> csaa-forum
> discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
>
> www.csaa.asn.au
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 13:14:25 +0930
> From: Catherine Speck <catherine.speck at adelaide.edu.au>
> Subject: Re: [csaa-forum] publications for newsletter
> To: CSAA discussion list <csaa-forum at darlin.cdu.edu.au>
> Message-ID: <41466919.CF19B1CA at adelaide.edu.au>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
> Greg,
>
> I have recently had published:
>
> Catherine Speck
> 'Painting Ghosts: Australian Women Artists in Wartime'
> Craftsman House/Thames and Hudson,
> Melbourne, 2004, 239pp.
>
> Cathy Speck
> Greg Noble wrote:
> >
> > Dear all
> >
> > Please send any details about new books that you've written to me for
> > listing in the next issue of the CSAA newsletter.
> >
> > PLUS, can any postgraduates send me details of any major publication:
> > book, book chapter or refereed journal article, for inclusion in a
> > special postgrad section.
> >
> > cheers
> > greg
> >
> > --
> > Dr Greg Noble
> >
> > School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> > University of Western Sydney
> > C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> > Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> > Penrith South DC
> > NSW 1797
> > Australia
> >
> > Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> > Parramatta Campus, UWS
> >
> > Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> > (Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
> > _______________________________________
> >
> > csaa-forum
> > discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
> >
> > www.csaa.asn.au
>
> --
> Dr Catherine Speck
> Art History Programme, History Department
> University of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA 5005
> Ph : +61 8 8303 5746
> e-mail: catherine.speck at adelaide.edu.au
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------
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> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 3
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 14:06:05 +0800
> From: "Grant Stone" <G.Stone at murdoch.edu.au>
> Subject: RE: [csaa-forum] publications for newsletter
> To: "CSAA discussion list" <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>
> Message-ID:
> <FA625D4A1DA2464EACA7628152ACF76D0C30FA at MERCURY.ad.murdoch.edu.au>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> Hi Cathy,
>
> I am wondering if you are the same Catherine Speck who worked for a
> period of time with me at Murdoch University in WA, and on occasion my
> host in Melbourne? Even if not, congratulations on your publication - I
> just love the production values of Craftsman House.
>
> Cheers
> Grant
> Grant L. Stone
> Scholarly Resources Librarian
> Murdoch University Library
> PO Box 1014, Canning Vale, W AUSTRALIA 6155
> Mob. 0412 170 665 Ph. 08 9360 2696
> Hm Ph. 08 9349 5804 Fax. 08 9310 2780
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Catherine Speck [mailto:catherine.speck at adelaide.edu.au]
> Sent: Tuesday, 14 September 2004 11:44 AM
> To: CSAA discussion list
> Subject: Re: [csaa-forum] publications for newsletter
>
>
> Greg,
>
> I have recently had published:
>
> Catherine Speck
> 'Painting Ghosts: Australian Women Artists in Wartime' Craftsman
> House/Thames and Hudson,
> Melbourne, 2004, 239pp.
>
> Cathy Speck
> Greg Noble wrote:
> >
> > Dear all
> >
> > Please send any details about new books that you've written to me for
> > listing in the next issue of the CSAA newsletter.
> >
> > PLUS, can any postgraduates send me details of any major publication:
> > book, book chapter or refereed journal article, for inclusion in a
> > special postgrad section.
> >
> > cheers
> > greg
> >
> > --
> > Dr Greg Noble
> >
> > School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> > University of Western Sydney
> > C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> > Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> > Penrith South DC
> > NSW 1797
> > Australia
> >
> > Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> > Parramatta Campus, UWS
> >
> > Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> > (Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
> > _______________________________________
> >
> > csaa-forum
> > discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
> >
> > www.csaa.asn.au
>
> --
> Dr Catherine Speck
> Art History Programme, History Department
> University of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA 5005
> Ph : +61 8 8303 5746
> e-mail: catherine.speck at adelaide.edu.au
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> This email message is intended only for the addressee(s)
> and contains information which may be confidential and/or copyright. If
> you are not the intended recipient please do not read, save, forward,
> disclose, or copy the contents of this email. If this email has been
> sent to you in error, please notify the sender by reply email and delete
> this
> email and any copies or links to this email completely and immediately
> from your system. No representation is made that this email is free of
> viruses. Virus scanning is
> recommended and is the responsibility of the recipient.
> _______________________________________
>
> csaa-forum
> discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
>
> www.csaa.asn.au
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 4
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 20:19:12 +1000
> From: Greg Noble <g.noble at uws.edu.au>
> Subject: Re: [csaa-forum] publications for newsletter
> To: CSAA discussion list <csaa-forum at darlin.cdu.edu.au>
> Message-ID: <a06020403bd6c760fbcb4@[137.154.196.59]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
>
> Hi
>
> If they will be published this year, I am!
>
> cheers
>
> greg
>
> >Re: the postgrad publications: I have several in the pipeline but am not
> >sure of the issue number (ie it would just be "forthcoming"). Are you
> >interested in these?
> >
> >Cheers,
> >
> >Mel.
> >
> >In message <a06020403bd6bda1e1e6b@[137.154.196.106]> Greg
> >Noble <g.noble at uws.edu.au>
> > writes:
> >> Dear all
> >>
> >> Please send any details about new books that you've written to me for
> >> listing in the next issue of the CSAA newsletter.
> >>
> >> PLUS, can any postgraduates send me details of any major publication:
> >> book, book chapter or refereed journal article, for inclusion in a
> >> special postgrad section.
> >>
> >> cheers
> >> greg
> >>
> >> --
> >> Dr Greg Noble
> >>
> >> School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> >> University of Western Sydney
> >> C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> >> Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> >> Penrith South DC
> >> NSW 1797
> >> Australia
> >>
> >> Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> >> Parramatta Campus, UWS
> >>
> >> Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> >> (Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
> >> _______________________________________
> >>
> >> csaa-forum
> >> discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
> >>
> >> www.csaa.asn.au
> >
> >--
> >m.campbell3 at pgrad.unimelb.edu.au
> >_______________________________________
> >
> >csaa-forum
> >discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
> >
> >www.csaa.asn.au
>
>
> --
> Dr Greg Noble
>
> School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> University of Western Sydney
> C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> Penrith South DC
> NSW 1797
> Australia
>
> Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> Parramatta Campus, UWS
>
> Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> (Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 5
> Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 20:47:08 +1000
> From: Greg Noble <g.noble at uws.edu.au>
> Subject: [csaa-forum] Fwd: publications for newsletter
> To: csaa-forum at darlin.cdu.edu.au
> Message-ID: <a06020413bd6c7c262a08@[137.154.196.59]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
>
> Thanks to everyone who sent me details of publications - i won't
> thank you all individually!
>
> But can I ask one thing - if you are a postgrad but didn't indicate
> so, can you resend the details with 'postgrad' somewhere? I wanted to
> make the two lists separate so the postgrad output was highlighted.
>
> And for those of you who haven't responded yet, keep sending those
> cards and letters ...
>
> greg
>
> >Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 09:13:43 +1000
> >To: csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au
> >From: Greg Noble <g.noble at uws.edu.au>
> >Subject: publications for newsletter
> >Cc:
> >Bcc:
> >X-Attachments:
> >
> >Dear all
> >
> >Please send any details about new books that you've written to me for
> >listing in the next issue of the CSAA newsletter.
> >
> >PLUS, can any postgraduates send me details of any major publication:
> >book, book chapter or refereed journal article, for inclusion in a
> >special postgrad section.
> >
> >cheers
> >greg
> >
> >--
> >Dr Greg Noble
> >
> >School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> >University of Western Sydney
> >C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> >Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> >Penrith South DC
> >NSW 1797
> >Australia
> >
> >Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> >Parramatta Campus, UWS
> >
> >Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> >(Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
>
>
> --
> Dr Greg Noble
>
> School of Humanities ph: (02) 47 360 365
> University of Western Sydney
> C Bldg, Kingswood campus
> Locked Bag 1797 email: g.noble at uws.edu.au
> Penrith South DC
> NSW 1797
> Australia
>
> Researcher, Centre for Cultural Research
> Parramatta Campus, UWS
>
> Co-author of Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other
> (Sydney Institute of Criminology, 2004)
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> _______________________________________
>
> csaa-forum
> discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
>
> www.csaa.asn.au
>
> End of csaa-forum Digest, Vol 5, Issue 6
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