Ian Hoskins Ian Hoskins i(A149796 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Whitefella Way by Jon Rhodes Ian Hoskins , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Aboriginal History Journal , September no. 47 2024; (p. 205-207)

— Review of Whitefella Way Jon Rhodes , 2022 selected work art work
'Whitefella Way is photographer and historian Jon Rhodes’s follow up to his much acclaimed Cage of Ghosts, published in 2018. Both are produced by Darkwood in large format replete with illustrations that include historical and contemporary maps, artworks, historical photographs and images taken by Rhodes himself over many years of pondering, while travelling, portraying the relationship between black and white ways of making sacred monuments and significant sites. In particular, both books explore Aboriginal carved trees, bora grounds and grave sites, and their destruction and preservation by the Europeans who dispossessed their makers. Both books weave personal encounters and primary source research sensitively. Both are beautiful works by way of content and design' (Introduction)
1 Alan Atkinson Writes about Two of the Best-known and Consequential Figures of Early Colonial Australia Ian Hoskins , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , vol. 20 no. 3 2023; (p. 456-457)

— Review of Elizabeth and John : The Macarthurs of Elizabeth Farm Alan Atkinson , 2022 single work biography

'John Macarthur has been a polarising figure in Australian history since HV Evatt’s rehabilitation of his adversary, William Bligh first appeared in 1937. Evatt cast Macarthur as a defender of landed wealth; brilliant but without ‘scruple or ‘pity’ (1944, Rum Rebellion, 197). MH Ellis countered this revisionism in his sympathetic 1955 biography of Macarthur. John’s longstanding place as nation-builder was reinforced with Gordon Andrews’ 1966 design of the new colourful two-dollar note featuring a handsome Macarthur and an equally impressive merino ram; a brilliantly distilled history lesson for Australians for 20 years. Decades later he was a ‘colonial bully’.' (Introduction)   

1 Photographies' Recuperative Lens Ian Hoskins , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , August vol. 12 no. 2 2015; (p. 256)

— Review of Calling the Shots : Aboriginal Photographies 2014 anthology criticism
1 Finding Henry Lawson Ian Hoskins , 2013 single work column
— Appears in: Inside History , May-June no. 16 2013; (p. 56-59)
'He was the 'city bushman' whose stories are still loved the country over. North Sydney historian, Ian Hoskins, was surprised by how much his own neighbourhood was reflected in Lawson's writings and consequently, his life.'
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