School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications

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    Discourses of affinity in the reading communities of Geoffrey Chaucer
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Ohio State University Press, 1999)
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    Winner and waster
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Garland, 1998)
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    Fair exchange in Measure for Measure
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Deakin University Press, 1990)
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    Speaking with the dead
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (English Department, University College, Australian Defence Force Academy, 1990)
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    Medieval English Poetry
    Trigg, Stephanie (editor) ( 1993)
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    Wynnere and Wastoure
    Trigg, Stephanie (editor) (Oxford University Press, 1990)
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    lntertextuality and ontology
    FROW, JOHN (Manchester University Press, 1990)
    The concept of intertextuality requires that we understand the concept of text not as a self-contained structure but as differential and historical. Texts are shaped not by an immanent time but by the play of divergent temporalities. Texts are therefore not structures of presence but traces and tracings of otherness. They are shaped by the repetition and the transformation of other textual structures. These absent textual structures at once constrain the text and are represented by and within it; they are at once preconditions and moments of the text.
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    Recovering memory
    FROW, JOHN ( 1996)
    To speak of memory as tekhne, to deny that it has an unmediated relation to experience, is to say that the logic of textuality by which memory is structured has technological and institutional conditions of existence. Let me illustrate the enabling conditions of the ‘textual’ logic of memory by reference to the controversy over recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse.
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    Literature, culture, mirrors
    FROW, JOHN ( 1997)
    John Frow responds to Simon During Simon During proposes – as I read it – six sets of reasons for the shift within departments of English from traditional literary studies towards cultural studies. The first is the academic appropriation of a tradition of Romantic anti-academicism stretching from Wordsworth to Dada. The second is a new mode of subject formation by which students are trained as consumers of cultural goods. The third is the valorization of social identities perceived as marginal within a traditional academic framework. The fourth is the development of new regimes of student choice, reflected in changed patterns of enrolment. The fifth is the emergence of a policy framework designed to enhance national economic competitiveness. The sixth is a regime of training which prepares students for jobs in the cultural sector.
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    A politics of stolen time
    FROW, JOHN ( 1998)
    This is a story about acts of telling that are true and acts that are false. It is about being told things and not being heard. It is about the relation between telling stories and existing, or about being made not to exist. Millicent’s story is a part of the Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families, entitled Bringing Them Home. Delivered to the Australian Federal Government in 1997, the Report is a record of the history of forcible removal of indigenous children, usually of mixed descent, from their families and communities, and it makes recommendations about current laws, practices and policies, about compensation for the victims of past laws, practices and policies, and about the services that are or should be available for those victims.