Issue Details: First known date: 2005... 2005 Who's Australia? - Whose Australia? : Contemporary Politics, Society and Culture in Australia
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This volume of essays links the questions Who's Australia? and Whose Australia? in interrogating issues of politics, society and culture in contemporary Australia. The essays ask pressing questions about the connections between the construction of identities and the distribution of resources, whether political, social or cultural in one postcolonial settler nation at the beginning of the twenty-first century. The contributions cover areas of enquiry as diverse as international law, immigration, indigenous issues, globalisation, religion, gender politics, fiction, and black-white reconciliation. The essays arose out of an extended lecture series organized by the Australia Centre Berlin and the Free University of Berlin in 2003-2004 and offer a fascinating cross-section of current research undertaken by academics at major Australian and European universities.' Source: http://www.amazon.de/ (Sighted 25/09/2012).

Contents

* Contents derived from the Trier,
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Germany,
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Western Europe, Europe,
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WVT : Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier , 2005 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Double-Crossing One Nation : Contemporary Asian-Australian Narratives, Russell West-Pavlov , single work criticism
This chapter 'addresses more recent immigration experiences, namely the late-twentieth-century wave of immigration - not from Europe, but from East and South-East Asia - that has fundamentally inflected the character of contemporary Australian society. The work of Brian Castro (Birds of Passage, 1983), Yasmin Gooneratne (A Change of Skies, 1991) and Hsu-Ming Teo (Love and Vertigo, 2000) reveals other trajectories in which the figure of crossing supplements that of the absent origin to destabilize excessively closed notions of national identity.' (From author's introduction, 14)
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Last amended 25 Sep 2012 10:55:05
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