Past News/Events (2007 and 2008)
Past News/Events
8-10 September 2008 - Collective Biography Conference
Convenors: Jane Shaw, New College,
Venue: ANU
August 2008 - Drill Hall Gallery and School of Art Gallery Exhibition, ANU: Recovering Lives
Curators:
29-30 August 2008 - Race, Nation, History: In Honour of Henry Reynold Conference
Convenors: Bain Attwood,
Venue: National Library of
Further details.
21-22 August 2008 - Rethinking Late Style Conference
Convenors: Gordon McMullan, Kings College, London, Roger Hillman, Film Studies, School of Humanities, ANU, Sam Smiles, University of Plymouth and Caroline Turner, Research School of Humanities, ANU
Venue: ANU
Further details.
7 August 2008 - Recovering Lives Conference
Convenors: Cassandra Pybus,
Venue: ANU
Further details.
11 July - 12 October - National Library of Australia Exhibition: "A Modern Vision: Charles Bayliss photographer 1850-1897"
Charles Bayliss was probably
Winter - Penny Cousineau – Master Class and Art Forum
Penny Cousineau-Levine is the author of the first book-length, in-depth study of contemporary Canadian art photography: Faking Death: Canadian Art Photography and the Canadian Imagination (McGill-Queens UP, 2004). Her latest project interrogates the concept of masquerade in photography and performance art by women and members of other disenfranchised communities. Cousineau-Levine is professor of Art History and Theory and chair of the Department of Visual Arts at the
12 July 2008 - Public Lecture, part of ‘Photographies: new histories, new practices’ and VIVID, the inaugural Photography Festival
Speaker: Gail Jones, Professor in Writing,
Convenor
Time/Venue: 4pm-5pm, National Library of
Supported by the
10-11 July 2008 - ‘Photographies: new histories, new practices’ conference and related programs
This event will coincide with the opening of the National Photography Festival, which will involve all the national institutions, public art spaces and commercial galleries in Canberra. More than 20 exhibitions will be on show over a three month period from 10 July until early October, accompanied by a huge range of public programs, artist’s talks and workshops. The focus will be on the Asia-Pacific region and both historical and contemporary material will be considered. The themes of the conference may include: photography and social space; photography and ethics; photography and war; photography and writing; photography and the 1970s; photography and Indigenous culture; photography and masquerade; photography and regionalism; photography and the museum. For further information contact the conference committee chair, Helen Ennis. For updates visit the National Photography Festival website.
Further details.
9 July 2008 - Migration Memories
Speaker: Mary Hutchinson, Research School of Humanities, ANU
This event is part of the Museums and Collections Seminar Series for 2008.
Convenors: Kylie Message and Caroline Turner
Time/Venue: 12.30pm-2.00pm, Conference Room, Old
4 June 2008 - The Role of Cultural Activities in Public Diplomacy
Speaker: Leilani Bin-Juda, Executive Officer, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
This event is part of the Museums and Collections Seminar Series for 2008.
Convenors: Kylie Message and Caroline Turner
Time/Venue: 12.30pm-2.00pm, Conference Room, Old
15 May - 7 June 2008 - Sesserae: The Works of Dennis Nona
ANU School of
Sesserae: The Works of Dennis Nona features more than 60 prints by the renowned
Dennis Nona is widely acknowledged as one the most important Torres Strait Islander artists. Born on
Dennis Nona is now regarded as one of the highest exponents of linocut printmaking in Australia with works acquired by state and national public collections in Australia and overseas, including the National Gallery of Australia, Queensland Art Gallery, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Victoria and Albert Museum in London, British Museum, London Musee d’Histoire Naturelle de Lyon, France and he is to be included in several important international exhibitions in London, Paris and at the Queensland Art Gallery.
Sesserae is a Griffith Artworks travelling exhibition in partnership with Queensland Indigenous Arts Marketing and Export Agency (QIAMEA) and is toured by Museum & Gallery Services Queensland.
7 May 2008 - Using Objects to Remember the Dead and Affect the Living: The Case of a Miniature Model of Treblinka
Speaker: Andrea Witcomb, Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University
This event is part of the Museums and Collections Seminar Series for 2008.
Convenors: Kylie Message and Caroline Turner
Time/Venue: 12.30pm-2.00pm, Conference Room, Old
9 April 2008 - Combating Prejudice and Rethinking Disability Representation in Museums
Speaker: Richard Sandell, Director and Head of the Department of Museum Studies,
This event is part of the Museums and Collections Seminar Series for 2008.
Convenors: Kylie Message and Caroline Turner
Time/Venue: 12.30pm-2.00pm, Conference Room, Old
12 March 2008 - Creating Cultural Citizenship out of Contemporary Art at the National Museum of the American Indian?
Speaker: Kylie Message, Research School of Humanities, ANU
This event is part of the Museums and Collections Seminar Series for 2008.
Convenors: Kylie Message and Caroline Turner
Time/Venue: 12.30pm-2.00pm, Conference Room, Old
12 March 2008 - Crossing Cultures: Conflict, Migration, Convergences Conference
26 February 2008 - Writing for Newspapers: A Workshop and Masterclass in the Journalist’s Craft
Old Canberra House
The Research School of Humanities is offering a one-day masterclass and workshop designed to develop the skills required to write effective and marketable op-ed pieces with leader Professor Brooke Kroeger, currently the chair of New York University’s Department of Journalism.
The workshop is open to all College graduate students but places are limited. All interested students must register by 5pm, 8 February. Full details.
Enquiries and registrations to Dr Carolyn Strange.
February - ‘Passing: Fraudulent Pasts’
This one-day event will explore, through fiction and history, and through multiple media, the phenomenon of passing. Rather than approach it exclusively in racial terms, which often serves to reify race and to impose unidimentional analyses, this symposium will emphasise its multiple meanings, including: the commodification of passing; passing through class boundaries; passing as a criminal offence; imposture; passing’s nostalgic appeal; performative passing; historically contingent perceptions of passing. The symposium will actively involve graduate students as participants. A full roster of participants will be available late in 2007. Convenors: Monique Rooney (English); Carolyn Strange (RSH).
8-9 November 2007 - Graduate Workshop: Crossing Time as Crossing Culture?
Old Canberra House
Co-ordinated by Carolyn Strange (RSH) and Tom Griffiths (Graduate Director, RSSS)
This workshop will be based on pre-existing successful models of intensive graduate training (such as the “Using Lives” workshop on biographical writing, the “Challenges to Perform” workshop, run previously through the CCR, and the “Environmental History” workshop, run through RSSS). It will recruit students from across CASS who are working on projects that involve crossing time and address the challenges of bridging past and present without flattening difference or emphasising chasm. Most importantly it will bring together history students and students from other disciplines within CASS, whose projects involve historical analysis. One of this workshop’s key objectives is to develop students’ capacity to approach their research and writing as a way to perform the past, and to bring it alive in the present. Workshop leaders will work with students to develop the skills necessary to do so. Up to 20 students may enroll. The workshop will be open to ANU students as well as students from other universities if spaces remain open. For further information contact Carolyn Strange or Tom Griffiths.
29 October 2007 - SchoolScapes
A new film by David MacDougall, launched by Dr Debjani Ganguly
5.30pm, The Theatrette, Old Canberra House
Inspired by the cinema of Lumière and the ideas of the 20th century Indian thinker Krishnamurti, David MacDougall explores in his new film a famous progressive school in South India, the Rishi Valley School. This is a film dedicated to the simple act of looking, in which each scene is a single shot.
Further details.
25 October 2007 - Back formation and rediscovery: reflections on radical revisionism
ANU School of Art Annual Lecture: Dr Chris McAuliffe
6pm,
Further details.
28 September 2007 - Workshop on Manipuri Dance from India
For further details see RSH website.
September 2007 - “A Guide to Research in Indigenous and Isolated Communities”
Book Launch and Workshop
John Carty, a PhD student at the Research School of Humanities, has recently published a frank, lively, and insightful account of his own and other researchers’ experiences conducting field research. This guide will be invaluable to students about to leave for extended research, as well as their supervisors. A short workshop, headed by Carty, will be held for interested students across campus. The workshop will be followed by a launch.
19 September 2007 - “The French Resistance: Between History and Memory”
Lecture and possible masterclass
Prof Olivier Wieviorka (Ecole
This event will be co-sponsored by the Departments of History and French as well as the National Europe Centre. Prof. Wieviorka’s visit is funded by the French Embassy.
For further details contact Prof. Ann Curthoys.
1-2 September 2007 - Negotiating the Sacred IV: Tolerance, Education and the Curriculum
A two-day conference and edited collection
Convened by; Elizabeth Burns Coleman, Faculty of Arts Postdoctoral Fellow, Monash University; and Kevin White, Reader in Sociology, Australian National University
Keynote speakers: Professor Susan Mendus, Political Philosophy, University of York, UK; Associate Professor Philip Cam, Philosophy, University of New South Wales, President, Asia-Pacific Philosophy Education Network for Democracy; Professor James T. Richardson, Sociology and Judicial Studies, University of Nevada
Further details
17 August 2007 - Classical Ballet in historical and transnational perspective
Time/Place: 1-2:30pm, Old Canberra House Theatrette
“A Museum of Props: The Imperial Russian Sleeping Beauty (1890), nineteenth-century French historiography and the balletic challenge to the historical text”.
Presented by Dr Helena Hammond,
