- Academic Services and Registrar - Research Publications
Academic Services and Registrar - Research Publications
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ItemScience Fiction’s Ethical Modes: Totality and Infinity in Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy and Yevgeny Zamyatin’s Мы (We)Kendal, Z ; Kendal, Z ; Smith, A ; Champion, G ; Milner, A (Springer International Publishing, 2020)This chapter asks whether science fiction (SF) has a predisposition to a particular ethical orientation. Rather than seek a single answer to this question of SF’s ethics, Kendal examines two classic SF texts and the traditions they represent: Isaac Asimov’s Foundation trilogy (1951–1953), one of the most iconic series of SF’s American “golden age,” and Yevgeny Zamyatin’s Мы (We) (1921), a highly influential dystopian novel from an Eastern European SF tradition. Drawing on the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas, Kendal argues that the genre SF that developed in the American pulp magazines was dominated by themes and modes of literary representation best described as totalising, while SF not governed by these generic expectations has often engaged effectively in a more ethical representation of the other.
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ItemAll I Want To Know Is Who I Am: Archival Justice for Australian Care LeaversEvans, J ; Golding, F ; O'Neill, C ; Tropea, R ; Wallace, DA ; Duff, WM ; Saucier, R ; Flinn, A (Routledge - Taylor & Francis, 2020)Joanne Evans, Frank Golding, Cate O’Neill, and Rachel Tropea recount Australian Care Leavers’ struggle for archival justice in the form of access, and the role of archival and recordkeeping professionals in both furthering and frustrating that struggle. While asserting a professional obligation to participate in a movement towards equity in records and recordkeeping, they observe the profession’s lacklustre collective response and rightfully question the extent to which archival and recordkeeping regimes embedded in existing power structures can meet the needs of the Care Leaver community. This theme appears throughout chapters concerning public records, particularly those produced in the course of systematic dispossession. Using Barbara Klugman’s framework to evaluate social justice advocacy, the authors assess the potential of the Australian Government’s Find and Connect program to further social justice.
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ItemMusic in Guinea's First RepublicCounsel, G ; JANSEN, J (Leiden University Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development, 2004)
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ItemThe Return of Mali's National Arts FestivalCounsel, G ; JANSEN, J (Leiden University Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development, 2004)
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ItemYouTube in academic teaching: A multimedia documentation of Siramori Diabate’s song ‘Nanyuman’Camara, B ; Counsel, G ; Jansen, J ; Merolla, D ; Turin, M (Open Book Publishers, 2017-05-15)Taking an innovative and interdisciplinary approach, this volume explores the idea of sharing as a model to construct and disseminate the knowledge of literary heritage with the people who are represented by and in it.
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ItemMusic for a revolution: The sound archives of Radio Télévision GuinéeCOUNSEL, G ; Kominko, M (Open Book Publishers, 2015-02-16)This volume celebrates the tenth anniversary of the Endangered Archives Programme at the British Library, established to document and publish online formerly inaccessible and neglected archives from across the globe.
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ItemA Sensorial Act of ReplicationCLARKE, JJ ; SMITH, M (MIT Press, 2005)
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ItemPlace as acoustic space: Hearing Australian IdentityBANDT, R ; Vanclay, ; Higgins, ; Blackshaw, (National Museum of Australia Press, 2008)
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ItemSimulated Talking Machines: Stelarc's Prosthetic HeadCLARKE, J ; Kroker, A ; Kroker, M (University of Toronto Press, 2008)
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ItemThe Detective Maidservant: Catherine Crowe's Susan HopleySUSSEX, LJ ; AYRES, B (Praeger Publishers, 2003)