The Australian National University
Research School of Humanities
ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
document location: http://rsh.anu.edu.au/fellowships/2007fellows.php

Fellowships and Grants

Research School of Humanities Visiting Fellows for 2007


Professor Ken TAYLOR, HRC, ANU. (1 January - 1 August 2007). Email: k.taylor@anu.edu.au

Dr Rick KUHN, School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University: Henryk Grossman on imperialism; anti-Muslim racism in Australia (2 January 2007 to 28 February 2007). Email: rick.kuhn@anu.edu.au

Dr Donna MERWICK, Long Term HRC Visiting Fellow, Melbourne.

Dr Susan FORSYTH, Independent Scholar, and Fellow at University of Essex: Major General James W. Forsyth: An Army Life. (8 January 2007 to 30 March 2007). Email: susan.forsyth@btinternet.com

Dr Stephen GAPPS, Sydney, NSW: Mobile Monuments: Historical Re-enactment and Commemoration. (16 January 2007 to 8 April 2007). Email: stephen.gapps@optusnet.com.au

Dr Ann VICKERY, Women's Studies and Gender Research, Monash University: The Life of a Literary Reputation: Judith Wright. (27 January 2007 to 11 March 2007). Email: ann.vickery@arts.monash.edu.au

Professor Peter PUTNIS, Communication Studies, University of Canberra: Media network history and the globalisation of news. (29 January 2007 to 13 July 2007). Email: pxp@comedu.canberra.edu.au

Dr Jonathan WALKER, Sesqui Postdoctoral Fellow, SOPHI, University of Sydney: Rubbish: The Trial of Antonio Foscarini, 1615-18. (1 February 2007 to 29 March 2007). Email: jonathan.walker@arts.usyd.edu.au

Dr Shady COSGROVE, School of Journalism and Creative Writing, University of Wollongong: Auto/biographical Structure and "The Graceland Chronicles". (1 March 2007 to 30 March 2007). Email: shady@uow.edu.au

Ms Anne BRENNAN, The Art Theory Workshop, ANU art School, ANU: Re-Collecting Proskurov. (5 March 2007 to 22 June 2007). Email: anne.brennan@anu.edu.au

Dr Fiona JENKINS, School of Humanities, The Australian National University: Figuring Grievable Lives. (6 March 2007 to 26 May 2007). Email: fiona.jenkins@anu.edu.au

Dr Helena HAMMOND, School of Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Warwick: Re-embodying History: Historical Representation in Dance Performance and Practice, 1890-2005. (18 April 2007 to 10 June 2007 and again from 7 July 2007 to 8 August 2007) Email: helena.hammond@btopenworld.com

Mr William FOX, Independent Scholar: The Aerial Imagination. (1 April 2007 to 24 June 2007). Email: wlfox@earthlink.net

Dr Toby HAGGITH, Public Service Officer and Film Programmer, Film and Video Archive, Imperial War Museum: The Heirs of Uncle Toby Shandy: Military re-enactment in British Society and Culture. (1 April 2007 to 25 June 2007). Email: thaggith@iwm.org.uk

Professor Philip PAYTON, Director, Institute of Cornish Studies, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Exeter: Constructing a discourse of transnationality: Assertions of 'Cornish Biography' in South Australia from foundation to today. (23 April 2007 to 17 July 2007). Email: p.j.payton@exeter.ac.uk

Professor Mark PHILLIPS, Department of History, Carleton University: Historical Re-enactment: History and distance in a sentimental age. (1 May 2007 to 30 June 2007). Email: mark_phillips@carleton.ca

Professor Ruth PHILLIPS, Department of Art History, Carleton University: Representing Indigenous Memory in Canada, Museums and Histories of Art. (1 May 2007 to 30 June 2007). Email: ruth_phillips@carleton.ca

Professor Barbara CAINE, Historical Studies, Monash University: Lives of Struggle: Women in the South African Liberation Movement. (4 May 2007 to 30 June 2007). Email: barbara.caine@monash.edu.au

Professor Patrick MANNING, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of World History, Department of History, University of Pittsburgh: The Past in the Public Eye: Historical Writing and Human-Rights Debates. (1 June 2007 to 15 July 2007). Email: planeterra@comcast.net

Dr Bernadette HINCE, 12 June 2007 to 31 December 2007 (Visiting Fellow at ANDC). Email: bernadette.hince@anu.edu.au

Dr Catriona ELDER, Sociology and Social Policy, University of Sydney: Remembering and Belonging: Non-Indigenous Australian Narratives of Colonial Encounters. (27 August 2007 to 20 November 2007). Email: catriona.elder@arts.usyd.edu.au

Professor Sue MENDUS, Political Philosophy, York University: Presenting four Public Lecture at the Research School of Humanities. (3 August 2007 to 3 September 2007). Email: slm6@york.ac.uk

Mr Yang KUN, East Asia Institute of Visual Anthropology. (15 October 2007 to 28 September 2008). Email: yunfestyk@yahoo.com.cn

Dr Roxana WATERSON, Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore. (15 October 2007 to 30 November 2007). Email: socroxan@nus.edu.sg

Professor Robert ROSS, African History, Leiden University: The Kat River settlement, 1829-1860: A community biography. (6 August 2007 to 28 October 2007). Email: r.j.ross@let.leidenuniv.nl

Visiting Fellows Biographies

Taylor, Emeritus Professor Ken
Dates: 1 January 2007 to 1 August 2007

Emeritus Professor Ken Taylor AM has degrees in Geography, Town Planning and Landscape Architecture and is former Professor of Landscape Architecture and Co-Director, Cultural Heritage Research Centre, University of Canberra. He has had a research and professional interest in cultural landscapes since the mid-1980s and published nationally and internationally on their intangible values, meanings and conservation management. His current work involves the application of this to Asia-Pacific region countries, including Australia, as the social and economic role of cultural heritage expands, and particularly through the understanding of authenticity in Asian cultures. He is a Visiting Professor at Silpakorn University, Bangkok, where he teaches on the International Program in Architectural Heritage Management and Tourism. As a Board member of AusHeritage he has participated in missions to a number of countries including India most recently at the 2004 workshop with INTACH (Indian National trust for Art and Cultural heritage) in preparation for an Indian Cultural Heritage Charter; Indonesia; and in August 2004 he will be involved in a workshop and conference in Myanmar. He has given guest lectures at various universities in the USA, Canada, Britain, France and Asia-Pacific region. He has been a consultant to UNESCO and the World Heritage Centre, particularly in relation to cultural landscape values.

He also has a particular focus on Canberra’s planning and is completing a book, Canberra the landscape city, for 2004 publication by the National Capital Authority. He comments regularly in the media on Canberra planning issues. He took part in the December 2003 ASEAN-AusHeritage Adelaide Workshop on Cultural Mapping with reference to the joint research project with the ACT government on a ‘ Cultural Map of Canberra on the Internet’ (http://www.culturalmap.act.gov.au/) . During 2005 he intends working on editing the twelve volume diary of a young British visitor to Australia in the late nineteenth century with its detailed observations and photographs of the Australian Landscape.

 
Kuhn, Dr Rick
Dates: 2 January 2007 to 28 February 2007
Research Projects: Henryk Grossman on imperialism; anti-Muslim racism in Australia

Rick Kuhn is a reader in political science in the School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts, Australian National University. His interests include Australian politics and political economy, Marxist theory and practice. Also see www.anu.edu.au/polsci/rick. At the Humanities Research Centre he will be extending work for the biography Henryk Grossman and the recovery of Marxism, to examine Grossman's understandings of imperialism from the period before the First World War when he was a Jewish workers' leader in Krakow, through his membership of the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt where he gained a high profile as a theorist of economic crises, to his exile in Paris, London and New York. Rick will also be examining the pattern of anti-Muslim racism in Australia from a comparative perspective.

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Forsyth, Dr Susan
Dates: 8 January 2007 to 31 March2007
Research Project: Major General James W. Forsyth: An Army Life

Susan Forsyth is an independent scholar, freelance book indexer, and Associate Fellow of the Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies at the University of Essex.
Her main interests are in American Indian literature, history and politics. At the University of Essex she completed a B.A. in U.S. Literature in 1992, and an M.A. in Cross-cultural Studies in 1994. She received funding from Christ Church University College, Canterbury, Kent, to undertake a Ph.D. on various textual and visual representations of the 1890 Massacre at Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota.
Susan has taught part-time at Christ Church, Kent and Essex. Courses have included U.S. literature, American Indian literature and film, and postcolonial literature.
Her publications include Representing the Massacre of American Indians at Wounded Knee, 1890-2000 Lampeter: The Edwin Mellen Press; ‘“I heard this story from the Indians”: Oscar Howe’s Wounded Knee Massacre, ARARA, 3; ‘Writing Other Lives: Native American (Post)coloniality and (Auto)biography’ in Ashok Bery and Patricia Murray, eds (2000) Dislocations: Comparing Postcolonial Literatures, London: Macmillan, pp. 144-58.
Susan has made several month-long trips to the US over the last three years to collect information for her current project – a military biography of James William Forsyth, who was in charge of the Seventh Cavalry at the Wounded Knee Massacre. During the Civil and Frontier Wars Forsyth was Aide to General Philip Sheridan, and a companion of George Armstrong Custer.

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Gapps, Dr Stephen
Dates: 16 January 2007 to 8 April 2007
Research Project: Mobile Monuments: Historical Re-enactment and Commemoration

Dr Stephen Gapps’ PhD thesis, Performing the Past: A Cultural History of Historical Re-enactments, was the first interrogation of the history and practices of re-enactment. Stephen has taught Public History, Australian History, Colonialism and Cultural Studies subjects at UTS and worked as a professional historian in a wide range of heritage projects for government, industry and the media.
Over the last two years Stephen has co-directed Australia’s first History Events Management Company, called Historica. Historica conceive, design and conduct historical re-enactments and coordinate re-enactors for film and television such as the recent SBS ‘reality history’ series The Colony.
Stephen has participated in re-enactments in Europe, the US and Australia for over ten years. He is interested in the potential of performed histories - particularly the limits and possibilities of re-enacting Colonial and Indigenous histories, and the power of performed, commemorative histories as ‘mobile monuments’.

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Vickery, Dr Ann
Dates: 27 January 2007 to 11 March 2007
Research Project: The Life of a Literary Reputation: Judith Wright

Ann Vickery is a Monash Fellow in the Centre for Women's Studies & Gender Research at Monash University, Australia. She is currently working on two large projects, the first investigating the careers and reputations of post-war Australian women poets and the second examining the relationship between women writers and artists of the New York School. Both studies rethink the relationship between 'text' and 'life' as well as analyse the sociopoetics of authorship. Ann is the author of Leaving Lines of Gender: A Feminist Genealogy of Language Writing (Wesleyan UP, 2000) and Stressing the Modern: Cultural Politics in Australian Women's Poetry (Salt, UK, forthcoming 2007). She has published widely in the area of Australian poetry and innovative women's writing and was editor-in-chief of HOW2 (www.how2journal.com) between 2001 and 2002.

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Putnis, Professor Peter
Dates: 29 January 2007 to 13 July 2007
Research Project: Media network history and the globalisation of news

Peter Putnis is interested in the role of technologies of communication and the networks they enable in social formation and historical change. His research focuses on global developments in communication between 1840 and 1920. The fast developing new communication technologies of the nineteenth century, and the media they recast, allowed ideas and cultural values, often in the form of news discourse, to be transmitted around the world linking geographically disparate regions in a dynamic relationship. He is completing an ARC funded project on ‘Overseas news in the press in Australia and its conditions of production, 1860-1910’. This includes examination of the way the media helped construct the apprehension of world events in Australia in this period.

His recent publications include: War with America: The Trent Affair and the experience of news in colonial Australia, Journal of Australian Studies, 81, 93-106 (2004); How the international news agency business model failed – Reuters in Australia, 1877-1895. Media History, 12(1), 1-17 (2006); and Overseas news in the Australian press in 1870 during the Franco-Prussian War, History Australia, December (2006).

Peter Putnis is Chair of the Media History Section of the International Association of Media and Communication Research and is a past President of the Australian and New Zealand Communication Association. He is a Professor of Communication at the University of Canberra and, till the end of 2006, was Pro Vice-Chancellor of the Division of Communication and Education.

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Walker, Dr Jonathan Walker
Dates: 1 February 2007 to 29 March 2007
Research Project: Rubbish: The Trial of Antonio Foscarini, 1615-18.

Jonathan Walker was born near Liverpool in England in 1969, and was educated at the Universities of Glasgow and Cambridge. His interests include card games, photography, comic books, cinema and contemporary music, along with the history of Venice, which he has studied, researched, lectured and written on for ten years. In the process, he has published many articles in academic journals on topics such as gambling and espionage. From 2000-2002, he held a prestigious British Academy Post-doctoral Fellowship at Cambridge. In 2003, he moved to Australia to take up a fellowship at the University of Sydney, where he has recently been promoted to a position as International Research Fellow. He has also worked as a volunteer in a community for homeless men, a security guard, a postman, a census taker, a billposter, and (for one evening only) a theatre usher. His first book Pistols! Treason! Murder! – the illustrated biography of a Venetian spy – will be published by Melbourne UP in early 2007. He has also recently completed an illustrated novel Five Wounds. He is currently working on a number of projects, including a photographic essay on modern Venice and a comic strip ‘prequel’ to Pistols! entitled Reverse Garbage.

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Cosgrove, Dr Shady
Dates: 1 March 2007 to 30 March 2007
Research Project: Auto/biographical Structure and "The Graceland Chronicles"

With writing interests in fiction and non-fiction, Dr Shady Cosgrove is currently researching how narrative fiction techniques can be incorporated into creative non-fiction and how this affects popular and theoretical understandings of the two genres. Her current non-fiction work-in-progress The Beginner's Guide to Elvis is structured around three themes: the cultural significance of Elvis Presley to contemporary American culture, family mythologies, and notions of pilgrimage. It also explores three genres: the essay, the memoir and documentary writing.

With a background in journalism, she worked for John Fairfax Holdings at the Sydney Morning Herald and the Illawarra Mercury for five years. She covered the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games as a sports journalist as well as specialising in feature writing and sub-editing.

She graduated from Vassar College, New York (1996) with departmental and general honours in Women Studies and English before completing her doctorate at the Australian National University in 2002. Entitled ‘The Fictional Character as a Site of Agency: A Theoretical and Practical Exploration’ her thesis examined structural and post-structural debates about character. She is also a member of academic honour society Phi Betta Kappa.

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Brennan, Dr Anne
Dates: 5 March 2007 to 28 May 2007
Research Project: Re-Collecting Proskurov

Anne Brennan is an artist and writer; she lectures in the Art Theory Workshop at the School of Art, ANU. She has written and published extensively on issues in contemporary visual arts, craft and design. Anne’s research interests focus on history, memory and commemoration; she is especially interested in the way in which these are configured in public artefacts such as the museum and the memorial. She has undertaken several important artistic projects in museums, including Secure the Shadow at the Hyde Park Barracks Museum with Sydney artist Anne Ferran in 1994 and Is It Real at the Australian War Memorial, part of the Archives and the Everyday project in 1997. More recently, she worked with Anne Ferran on a commissioned work, Twice Removed, for the Maitland Regional Gallery as part of the HunterArt1: Art Tourist project in 2004. The exhibition dealt with the mass migration from Calais to Maitland in 1848 of English artisans working in the French machine lace-making industry.

Anne is currently working on a book about Proskurov, her mother’s birthplace in the Ukraine. It deals with the complex interweaving of public and private memory embedded in her relationship with the city, and seeks to explore the limitations of a sense of origins. Early material for the book has been published in Jill Bennett and Rosanne Kennedy (eds) World Memory: Personal Trajectories in Global Time Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke and New York, 2003 and Rosamund Dalziell (ed) Selves Crossing Cultures: Autobiography and Globalisation, Australian Scholarly Publishing, Melbourne, 2002. In August 2005 she presented a conference paper on photography, memory and violence, focussing on family photographs and photographs from the public archive dealing with aspects of the Russian Civil War as part of the Art and Commemoration symposium at the HRC.

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Jenkins, Dr Fiona
Dates: 6 March 2007 to 26 May 2007
Research Project: Figuring Grievable Lives

Fiona Jenkins is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the Australian National University where over the last 5 years she has taught courses in various areas of European philosophy, feminist theory, political philosophy, and on film as philosophy. After writing a DPhil thesis at Oxford on Nietzsche and the performative self, she taught at the University of Essex for 2 years, then moved from the UK to Australia to take up a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Sydney in 1997. She has published many essays on contemporary issues and events from a philosophical perspective in journals including The Australian Journal of Human Rights, Practical Philosophy, Angelaki, Constellations, and borderlands.
The research project to be pursued at the HRC is organized around the theme of ‘ungrievable lives’, a phrase taken from the recent work of Judith Butler. Broadly the research is concerned with thinking philosophically about how some lives are socially constituted as mattering more than others even in contexts where there is formal equality; and with how a critical understanding of such differential construction should inflect ethical and political reflection. Of particular interest here is the way in which media representations of lives and deaths can be critically evaluated.

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Hammond, Dr Helena
Telephone: 02 6125 58004
Dates: 18 April 2007 to 10 June 2007 and again from 7 July 2007 to 8 August 2007
Research Project: Re-embodying History: Historical Representation in Dance Performance and Practice, 1890-2005

Dr Helena Hammond holds a D.Phil. in History of Art from the University of Oxford and an MA from Yale University and a BA from the Courtauld Institute of Art, both also in History of Art. She is Lecturer in Dance for Warwick University. Previous teaching posts held in art history include as Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh and Visiting Lecturer at the Courtauld Institute of Art and Helena has also worked as Interim Education Manager at English National Ballet. Her research interests are centred in nineteenth and twentieth-century dance. She serves on the Executive Committee of the Society for Dance Research, is a regular contributor to the Dance Gazette published by the Royal Academy of Dance and contributed to The Oxford History of Western Art, ed. Martin Kemp (OUP 2000).

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Fox, Mr William (Bill)
Dates: 1 April 2007 to 24 June 2007
Research Project: The Aerial Imagination

William L. Fox is an independent scholar who has published numerous books on cognition and landscape, most of which are set in extreme environments such as deserts and the polar regions. He has been a visiting scholar at the Getty Research Institute, and been awarded grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, and National Science Foundation. He is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and Explorer's Club, and has also published fifteen collections of poetry and several monographs on photography.

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Haggith, Dr Toby
Dates: 1 April 2007 to 25 June 2007
Research Project: The Heirs of Uncle Toby Shandy: Military re-enactment in British Society and Culture

Toby Haggith works in the Film and Video Archive of the Imperial War Museum, where he is head of Public Services and devises the cinema programme. He studied history and politics at the University of York, and then later the economic and social history of Britain at Birkbeck College, University of London. His doctorate, which he undertook at the Centre for Social History in the University of Warwick, was about the representation of slum clearance and town planning in British films in the period 1918-1951. His published writings include essays on British peace-aims films of the Second World War; official film and British national identity; Otto Neurath and Isotype typography in propaganda films of the Second World War; and an examination of 'truth' and 'reality' in Saving Private Ryan. In 1999 he led a project to reconstruct the musical medley recommended to be played to accompany screenings of the official documentary The Battle of the Somme, when it was distributed in 1916/17. He has introduced numerous screenings of this film accompanied by a live piano rendition of this score, most recently at the 2006 Silent Film Festival in Pordenone. This project, and the historical issues raised, are discussed in an essay published in issue 1 of volume 14 (2002) of the journal Film History. He was also the author for the film sections for two educational CD Roms about The Battle of the Somme - 'Lest we Forget': the symbols interactive experience (Derry, 2000) and History in Motion: the First Day of the Somme - Interactive CD Rom (London, 2003). Toby was the co-editor with Joanna Newman of Holocaust and the Moving Image: Representations in Film and Television Since 1933 (London, 2005). Over the last few years he has been conducting research into the links between war-torn landscapes, memory and film (partly realised in a season presented in the Museum's cinema); the British memory of the Second World War in the period 1945-50; and military re-enactment and 'reality' or 'immersive television' in the UK. Early work on the last subject was presented at two conferences, the first at Vanderbilt University in April 2004 and then at the Imperial War Museum in October of the same year. Most recently he has presented papers on 'Veterans' Testimony in Historical Documentaries, 1919-2006' and the public reception of The Battle of the Somme. He also has a chapter on the filming of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, in Bardgett and Cesarani (eds.) Belsen 1945: New Historical Perspectives (Edgware, 2006).

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Payton, Professor Philip
Dates: 30 April 2007 to 20 July 2007
Research Project: Constructing a discourse of transnationality: Assertions of 'Cornish Biography' in South Australia from foundation to today

Philip Payton is Professor of Cornish & Australian Studies at the University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, where he is also Director of the Institute of Cornish Studies. He was also (2004-2006) President of the British Australian Studies Association, and is currently Vice-President. Philip completed his first doctorate (on ‘The Cornish in South Australia’) at the University of Adelaide in 1978 and his first book Pictorial History of Australia’s Little Cornwall was published in the same year. Subsequently, he has written extensively on a range of issues – emigration, mining and maritime history, ethnicity and identity – and recent books include Cornwall: A History (2nd ed. 2004), The Cornish Overseas: A History of Cornwall’s Great Emigration (2nd ed. 2005) and a biography A.L. Rowse and Cornwall: A Paradoxical Patriot (2005). His latest book, Making Moonta: The Invention of Australia’s Little Cornwall, is scheduled for publication during 2007. He is also editor of the series Cornish Studies, published by University of Exeter Press.

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Philips, Professor Mark
Dates: 1 May 2007 to 30 June 2007
Research Project: Historical Re-enactment: History and distance in a sentimental age

Mark Salber Phillips is an intellectual historian with a particular interest in questions of narrative and historical representation in 18th and 19th century Britain. His current work concerns the idea of “historical distance” and its place in variety of forms of historical description, ranging from national histories to literary history and history painting. He is the author of Society and Sentiment; Genres of Historical Writing in Britain, 1740-1820 (2000) and co-editor of Questions of Tradition (2005). Earlier studies include The Memoir of Marco Parenti; a life in Medici Florence (1987) and Francesco Guicciardini; the historian’s craft (1977). He is Professor of History at Carleton University, Ottawa.

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Philips, Professor Ruth
Dates: 1 May 2007 to 30 June 2007
Research Project: Representing Indigenous Memory in Canada, Museums and Histories of Art

Ruth B. Phillips is Canada Research Chair and Professor of Art History at Carleton University, Ottawa. Her fields of research are the art history of the Aboriginal peoples of northeastern North America and the history and theory of museums. She is currently directing the Great Lakes Alliance for the Study of Aboriginal Arts and Cultures (GRASAC), a major international research collaboration which is creating an innovative multimedia and multivocal digital research resource.
Phillips is the author of Representing Woman: Sande Masquerades of the Mende of Sierra Leone (1995), Trading Identities: The Souvenir in Native North American Art from the Northeast (1998), and Native North American Art (1998), co-authored with Janet Catherine Berlo. She also co-edited Unpacking Culture: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds with Christopher B. Steiner (1999), and Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums, and Material Culture (forthcoming 2006) with Elizabeth Edwards and Chris Gosden. From 1997-2003 Phillips served as director of the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology.

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Caine, Professor Barbara
Dates: 4 May 2007 to 30 June 2007
Research Project: Lives of Struggle: Women in the South African Liberation Movement

Barbara Caine is Professor of History and Head of the School of Historical Studies at Monash University. She is the author of several collective biographies including Destined to be Wives: The Sisters of Beatrice Webb ( Oxford University Press, 1986), Victorian Feminists, (Oxford University Press, 1992) and most recently Bombay to Bloomsbury: a biography the Stracheys, c 1850-1950 (Oxford University Press, 2005). She is currently writing a book on Biography and History for Palgrave Macmillan.

She has recently become interested in South African History, and particularly in the question of women's involvement in the struggle against apartheid. Her most recent publication in this area is 'Prisons as Spaces of friendship in Apartheid South Africa', History Australia, vol. 3, no 2, December 2006.

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Manning, Professor Patrick
Dates: 1 June 2007 to 15 July 2007
Research Project: The Past in the Public Eye: Historical Writing and Human-Rights Debates

Patrick Manning is Andrew W. Mellon Professor of World History at the University of Pittsburgh. He is also president of the World History Network, Inc., a nonprofit corporation fostering research in world history. A specialist in world history and African history, his current research addresses global historiography, early human history, migration in world history, the African diaspora, and the demography of African slavery.

In his 2007 project at the Humanities Research Centre, Manning will focus on identifying ways in which the histories of aboriginal and immigrant groups have been debated and distorted through national political discourse. He seeks to identify global patterns in the debates of such countries as France, Australia, Mexico, Sudan, Indonesia, and the United States.

He was educated at the California Institute of Technology (BS in Chemistry, 1963) and the University of Wisconsin - Madison (MS in History and Economics, PhD in History 1969). He was trained as a specialist in the economic history of Africa, and went on to explore demographic, social, and cultural patterns in Africa and the African diaspora. Manning taught at Northeastern University, 1984-2006, where he directed the World History Center and directed twelve PhD students in world history. He serves as Vice President of the Teaching Division of the American Historical Association, 2004-2006.

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Hince, Dr Bernadette
Telephone: 02 6125 9798
Dates: 12 June 2007 to 31 December 2007

Bernadette Hince is an independent researcher and writer with degrees in science and arts. Her PhD (ANU 2005) was an environmental history of subantarctic islands. She was science editor of the Australian National Dictionary (1988), co-editor of the CSIRO handbook of economic plants of Australia (1993) and author of The Antarctic dictionary (CSIRO/Museum Victoria, 2000), a historical dictionary of Antarctic English. Her interests include language, the polar regions, history, food and food plants.

She is now working on a comprehensive historical dictionary of Antarctic and Arctic English, and editing the 1953 Heard Island diaries of Australian John Bechervaise.

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Elder, Dr Catriona
Telephone: 02 6125 53036
Dates: 2 July 2007 to 24 September 2007
Research Project: Remembering and Belonging: Non-Indigenous Australian Narratives of Colonial Encounters

Catriona Elder is a senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Sydney. Her research interests include whiteness studies, racism and national identity and racism and anti-racism in contemporary Australia. Her book, Being Australian: Narratives of National Identity (Allen & Unwin, 2007) explores these issues.

Current research projects include work on assimilation, national identity and popular fiction; a project on history and television/cinema in contemporary Australia and a collaborative study (with Dr Amanda Elliot, USyd) on women, non-professional work and social life in Australia in the 1940s-1960s . Dr Elder also works with Dr Cath Ellis and Dr Angela Pratt on reconciliation in contemporary Australia.

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Mendus, Professor Sue
Telephone: 02 6125 50595
Dates: 3 August 2007 to 3 September 2007

Professor Susan Mendus studied Classics and Philosophy at the University of Wales. Her first degree was in Philosophy and, after graduating, she went to Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she studied for the B.Phil in Philosophy. On completing the B.Phil, Susan Mendus moved to York University. Initially, she held the post of Lecturer in Philosophy but, in the mid-1980s, she developed a special interest in political philosophy and became Morrell Fellow in Toleration in the Politics Department. From 1986 to 1990 Susan Mendus was Morrell Fellow in Toleration; from 1995 to 2000 she was Director of the Morrell Centre for the Study of Toleration. Susan Mendus has been Professor of Political Philosophy at York since 1996, and a Fellow of the British Academy since 2004.

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Ross, Professor Robert
Telephone: 02 6125 54159
Dates: 6 August 2007 to 28 October 2007
Research Project: The Kat River settlement, 1829-1860: A community biography

Robert Ross (1949) was born in Sidcup, near London, and went to school in London. After a short period teaching in Botswana, he studied history in Cambridge, both for a BA (1970) and a Ph.D. (1974), on the history of the Griquas in South Africa. Since then he has worked in Leiden in the Netherlands, on a variety of subjects primarily in the history of South Africa, in particular the colonial Cape. He has written a number of books on the subject, and is also editing the Cambridge History of South Africa, in two volumes, which will appear in 2007 and 2008. He is also completing a book entitled Clothing: a global history; or the imperialists’ new clothes, which will also appear in 2007.

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Waterson, Professor Roxana
Telephone: 02 6125 50722
Dates: 15 October to 230 November 2007

Roxana Waterson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore, where she has been teaching since 1987. She did her Ph. D. in Social Anthropology at New Hall, Cambridge (1981), and has done fieldwork with the Sa'dan Toraja people of Sulawesi (Indonesia) since 1978. Her publications include The Living House: An Anthropology of Architecture in Southeast Asia (3rd Edn, Thames & Hudson, 1997); Southeast Asian Lives: Personal Narratives and Historical Experience (Singapore/Athens, Ohio: Singapore University Press/Ohio University Press, 2007); and ‘Trajectories of Memory: Documentary Film and the Transmission of Testimony’, History and Anthropology 18/1:51-73 (March 2007). Her ethnographic monograph on the Sa’dan Toraja, Paths and Rivers: Sa’dan Toraja Society in Transformation, will be published by KITLV, Leiden, in 2008. She has been teaching critical and practical courses on visual ethnography since 2002, and is currently making a video about the now almost extinct indigenous religion of the Toraja, Aluk To Dolo. Her other current interests include social memory, life history and childhood research.

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