Skip to main content

RSHA

  • Home
  • About
  • Schools & Centres
  • People
    • Director
    • Executive
    • Professional staff
  • Study with us
    • Heritage and Museum Studies HDR Program
    • Graduate coursework
  • Events
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
    • Past events
  • Research
    • Coombs Fellowship
    • Coombs Indigenous Fellowship
    • Coombs Fellows Archive
    • Lalor
  • News
  • Contact us

Networks

  • ANU Health Humanities Network
    • About
    • News and Events
    • Steering Group
    • Contact
  • Francophone Research Cluster
    • Publications
  • MemoryHub@ANU
    • People
      • MemoryHub Convenors
      • ANU Network Members
      • PhD Students
      • Visitors
    • Publications
    • Events
      • Symposium
      • Reading group
      • Webinars
      • Workshops
    • Contact us

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • School of Archaeology & Anthropology
  • School of Art & Design
  • School of Literature, Languages & Linguistics
  • School of Music
  • Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies
  • Humanities Research Centre
  • Institute for Communication in Health Care

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeResearchFRC Publications
FRC Publications

Rule Britannia? Britain and Britishness 1707–1901

Author/editor: Peter Lindfield, Christie Margrave

Year published: 2015

The concept of Britishness – and its constituent facets – has, over the past decade, come increasingly to the fore. In particular, this can be seen in the politically and socially engaging debates surrounding the Scottish Referendum in 2014. It is an idea – manifested both physically and…

» read more

Vietnam and the Colonial Condition of French Literature

Author/editor: Leslie Barnes

Year published: 2014

Vietnam and the Colonial Condition of French Literature explores an aspect of modern French literature that has been consistently overlooked in literary histories: the relationship between the colonies—their cultures, languages, and people—and formal shifts in French literary production. Starting…

» read more

Art and Time

Author/editor: Derek Allan

Year published: 2013

A well-known feature of great works of art is their power to “live on” long after the moment of their creation – to remain vital and alive long after the culture in which they were born has passed into history. This power to transcend time is common to works as various as the plays of Shakespeare…

» read more

Representing Humanity in the Age of Enlightenment

Author/editor: Alexander Cook, Ned Curthoys, Shino Konishi

Year published: 2013

The Enlightenment era saw European thinkers increasingly concerned with what it meant to be human. This collection of essays traces the concept of ‘humanity’ through revolutionary politics, feminist biography, portraiture, explorer narratives, libertine and Orientalist fiction, the philosophy of…

» read more

Kangaroo Courts and the Rule of Law: The Legacy of Modernism

Author/editor: Desmond Manderson

Year published: 2012

Kangaroo Courts and the Rule of Law -The Legacy of Modernism addresses the legacy of contemporary critiques of language for the concept of the rule of law. Between those who care about the rule of law and those who are interested in contemporary legal theory, there has been a dialogue of the deaf…

» read more

Historical Reenactment: From Realism to the Affective Turn

Author/editor: Iain McCalman, Paul A. Pickering

Year published: 2010

Since the late 1700s new forms of visual entertainment have tried to simulate the details of nature: reenactment has now become the most widely-consumed form of popular history. This book engages with the quest for definition and appropriate delimitation of reenactment as well as questions about…

» read more

Art and the Human Adventure: André Malraux’s Theory of Art

Author/editor: Derek Allan

Year published: 2009

André Malraux was a major figure in French intellectual life in the twentieth century. A key component of his thought is his theory of art which presents a series of fundamental challenges to traditional explanations of the nature and purpose of art developed by post-Enlightenment aesthetics. For…

» read more

Feargus O'Connor: A Political Life

Author/editor: Paul A. Pickering

Year published: 2008

A survey of Feargus O'Connor's career written for a general and academic audience. At the height of his popularity as a leader of the Chartists' campaign for democratic reform in Britain, O'Connor enjoyed the support of millions of working people, but his role in the history of British radical…

» read more

Selling Sex: A Hidden History of Prostitution

Author/editor: Raelene Frances

Year published: 2007

From gun-toting Pansy Arlington, whose Palace of Pleasure provided years of dangerous excitement to colonial men on the Western Australian goldfields, to Puang Thong Simaplee, a young woman from Thailand arrested in a Surry Hills brothel only to die in Villawood Detention Centre before she could…

» read more

Unrespectable Radicals? Popular Politics in the Age of Reform

Author/editor: Michael T. Davis, Paul A. Pickering

Year published: 2007

In 1988 Iain McCalman's seminal work, Radical Underworld, unravelled the complex and clandestine revolutionary networks of democrats that operated in London between 1790 and the beginnings of Chartism, to reveal an urban underworld of prophets, infidels, pornographers and rogue preachers where…

» read more

Pagination

  • First page« First
  • Previous page‹‹
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Next page››
  • Last pageLast »