Australia’s China Knowledge Capability
Australia’s China Knowledge Capability How Australia can best support its national interests by getting to know China better. Since the sustained national effort to build
Australia’s China Knowledge Capability How Australia can best support its national interests by getting to know China better. Since the sustained national effort to build
Rhoda Tjitayi, Piltati Tjukurpa, 2023 © Rhoda Tjitayi/Copyright Agency, 2024 The 60th anniversary of Donald Horne’s landmark book, The Lucky Country, prompts us to think
The discrepancy between poetry and everyday language, and the difficulty that many of us have reading and understanding poetry, was once brought home to me
For five years in the early 1800s, a young woman by the name of Sara Baartman was exhibited in ‘freak shows’ in London and Paris—her
As we enter a new era marked by rapid technological change, major environmental challenges and shifting ideas about what it means to be human we
David Campbell Sim was born on 11 December 1957 in Melbourne’s inner north. His parents were working-class people with a great respect for educational advancement.
In Session one ‘Technologies and Creative Futures’ from our 51st Symposium ‘At the Crossroad? Australia’s Cultural Future’ held late last year, Wesley Enoch AM (former
This article reflects on a recent workshop convened by Professor Sue Kossew FAHA from Monash University and Associate Professor Anne Brewster from the University of
Regrettably, it took a public crowd funding initiative, and a bipartisan advocacy campaign led by historians, to achieve this result. Meanwhile, humanities students at Australian
Seven years after he began his science degree at Sydney University, 26-year-old Alexander Pereira is heading to Stanford University for postgraduate studies in philosophy. It’s
The Australian Academy of the Humanities recognises Australia’s First Nations Peoples as the traditional owners and custodians of this land, and their continuous connection to country, community and culture.