FOUNDATION FOR AUSTRALIAN STUDIES IN CHINA (ABN 23 151 021 037) Level 3 151 Macquarie Street Sydney NSW 2000 Australia ABN 23 151 021 037 BHP Chair of Australian Studies at Peking University The Foundation for Australian Studies in China (FASIC) is seeking Expressions of Interest from qualified applicants for the BHP Chair of Australian […]
Author: noriseman
Regional Identities & Coastal Communities of the Pacific The 24th annual conference of the New Zealand Studies Association (NZSA), together with the University of Aveiro Aveiro, Portugal, 27-30 June 2018 A 4-day international conference, with coach excursion, wine tasting and conference dinner. The conference venue is the University of Aveiro, the ‘Portuguese Venice’ and close […]
Call for Submissions: JEASA – Journal of the European Association for Studies of Australia Guest-edited Issue 1 / 2018: The Tides of Distant Isles: Transnational &Transcultural Readings of Contemporary Australian Poetry The issue, guest-edited by Dr. Matthew Hall (Deakin University, Australia), will comprise of interviews, select poems, and a series of articles on recent Australian […]
InASA Biennial Conference 2020
We are pleased to announce that the 2020 InASA Conference will be hosted by the Australian Catholic University in Melbourne from the 30th of November – 2nd of December 2020. ACU is located in Fitzroy, in the heart of Melbourne, with world-class facilities and easy access to lots of options for accommodation, cafes, bars, cultural […]
Australian Lives – an online oral history resource for Australian history teaching In this video, Alistair Thomson (Professor of History, Monash University) introduces an extraordinary new resource for school and university teaching in Australian history and Australian studies. The Australian Lives ebook curates access into one of Australia’s largest online oral history collections, so that students can […]
AHA2018: The Scale of History Call for papers Historians make choices about the scale of their inquiry. They set parameters for their projects – temporal, geographical, social, archival – which shape their research strategies, their potential audiences, and their interpretations and arguments. Do you write history on a grand or intimate scale? Or both? We […]