HRC Seminar - Restocking the British World: Empire Migration and Anglo-Canadian Relations, 1919-1930
Seminar
Throughout the 1920s Canadian politicians, immigration officials, eugenicists and political commentators talked about the need to ‘Canadianize’ all migrants who arrived in the dominion, including those from the mother country. This did not mean that Ottawa was out to ‘de-Britannicize’ those…
HRC Seminar - W. E. Adams, Chartism and Republicanism in Nineteenth Century Britain
Seminar
A printer by trade and one of Chartism’s key lieutenants, William Edwin Adams (1832-1906) became well known in radical circles on both sides of the Atlantic as the editor-in-chief of Joseph Cowen’s Newcastle Weekly Chronicle. Inspired by the writings of Thomas Paine and the Italian revolutionary…
HRC Seminar - Art, History, and Future – Reflections of Modern and Contemporary Art in Indonesia
Seminar
As a researcher and lecturer of modern & contemporary Asian art, one frequently considers the making of art, history, and its future – including in relation to the world and world-making, as well as in the recent claims that are being made producing a global history of contemporary art…
HRC Seminar - Slavery, Evil Deeds, and Re-thinking the Past: A Basis for Discussion
Seminar
In 1781 a British slave ship, the Zong, left West Africa carrying 442 Africans, arriving in Jamaica with only 208. Many had died in the crossing, but 132 had been thrown overboard by the crew, whose aim was to claim for the Africans on the ship’s insurance. But why should the crew deliberately kill…
Digital humanities: Project Bamboo and the ANU
Seminar
This seminar aims to introduce Project Bamboo and to initiate discussion about the possibilities this project, and digital scholarship generally, offers for individual and collaborative research in the humanities. Project Bamboo is a major international consortium of universities that…
Humanities Research Centre Workshop, ‘Hannah Arendt: Creating and Maintaining a World’
Workshop
In this workshop we will discuss Hannah Arendt’s conception of the ‘world’, what it means to have an orientation to the world and to care for the world. In her famous interview with the journalist Gunter Gaus Arendt defined the world as something that lies in-between human beings, a space of…
Freilich Foundation - Multiculturalism – Success or Failure? - Dr John Hewson
Lecture
Australia’s multicultural agenda has been under the spotlight. While migrants became an election issue, recent comments by European politicians about the failure of multiculturalism seemed to resonate with Australians. Economist and Former Leader of the Opposition, Dr John Hewson, will talk about…