School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications

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    Papua New Guinea’s Resource Curse
    Chandler, J (Schwartz Media, 2018)
    PNG LNG has yielded gas worth billions for its Western operators. Local landowners have received no royalties at all. With anger rising, dire consequences were predicted. Then disaster struck.
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    Rodrigo Arteaga: El artista que vincula ciencia, ecología y astronomía.
    Escobar Duenas, C ; Barcelo, J (El Desconcierto, 2016)
    “El sentido de la ecología parte de la pregunta si acaso existe un real límite entre lo natural y la cultura, y cuáles son esos límites que nos llevan a malas prácticas como sociedad, creando una distancia entre nosotros y la naturaleza" – Rodrigo Arteaga
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    Entrevista con Marianne Hougen-Moraga y Estephan Wagner – Songs of Repression (Chile, Dinamarca, 2020)
    Escobar Duenas, C ( 2020)
    In this interview with Cristóbal Escobar, programmer at the Santiago International Documentary Festival (FIDOCS), the directors of "Cantos de represión", Estephan Wagner and Marianne Hougen-Moraga, comment on how they tried to transcend Manichean visions in their portrait of the settlers. “We always approach the people in the documentary with an open mind. Obviously we have our clear political positions, but to open up to dialogue we considered it necessary for the protagonists to be able to speak from their own logic”, she affirms. Recently awarded at the Valdivia International Film Festival, among several other festivals around the world, the film can be seen for free, online and throughout Chile, within the framework of the twenty-fourth edition of FIDOCS, to be held between November 25 and December 1.
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    Sex and the women's movement: then and now
    Lusty, N (Sydney Morning Herald, 2021-11-05)
    Review of Amia Srinivasan's book, The Right to Sex
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    Inside the story: writing the powerful female world of Wentworth
    O'Meara, R ; Batty, C ; Taylor, S ; Dwyer, T ( 2019)
    Why do we tell stories, and how are they crafted? In this series, we unpick the work of the writer on both page and screen. One of the major considerations when creating an ongoing television series is its “story world”, made up by its place, people, themes, style and tone. Central to this world is the setting, known in television writing as the “hub” or “precinct”, which serves the need for constant generation of characters and storylines.
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    A Bit Lit conversations: How to write literary history when no literature survives, with David McInnis and Matt Steggle
    Kesson, A ( 2020)
    David McInnis and Matt Steggle tell us about their work on the lost plays of Shakespeare’s period, when plays are much more likely to be lost than to survive. They share insights into the wealth of information we have on lost plays and the theatrical culture they were part of.
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    Shakespeare Unlimited Podcast: Episode 164, “Praising What Is Lost.”
    Witmore, M ; Bogaev, B ( 2021)
    Today, the texts of roughly three thousand plays from the great age of Elizabethan theater are lost to us. The plays that remain constitute only a sixth of all of the drama produced during that period. How do we make sense of a swiss-cheese history with more holes than cheese? The Lost Plays Database tries to fill in those holes. It’s an open-access forum for information about lost plays from England originally written and performed between 1570 and 1642. The database collects the little evidence that remains of the lost plays, like descriptions of performances, lists of titles, receipts, diaries, letters, or fragments of parts. David McInnis, an Associate Professor at Australia’s University of Melbourne and one of the founders of the Lost Plays Database, has collected some of his discoveries about lost plays, as well as the new theories they have spawned, in a new book, Shakespeare and Lost Plays. We spoke with McInnis about a few favorite lost plays and how researching them is critical to understanding the works that have survived. David McInnis is interviewed by Barbara Bogaev.
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    Speaking of Shakespeare Podcast: David McInnis, Lost Plays
    Dabbs, T ( 2021)
    Thomas Dabbs speaks with David McInnis of the University of Melbourne. Along with Roslyn L. Knutson and Matthew Steggle, David is founder and co-editor of 'Lost Plays Database', and is the author of 'Shakespeare and Lost Plays' (Cambridge, 2021).
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    The Theatre History Podcast: Episode 80: Rediscovering Lost Plays with Dr. David McInnis
    Lueger, M ( 2021)
    Over half of the plays produced during Shakespeare’s time have since been lost. What can we learn from the little evidence that remains of these plays? Dr. David McInnis joins us to talk about his book Shakespeare and Lost Plays in our latest episode.