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BookPublication 30 Years of Urban Environmental Volunteering in Western Australia: Friends of Brixton Street Wetlands, Kenwick: Glimpses and InsightsThis book is organised into three main parts. After this brief introduction, the first section illustrates the main features of the Brixton Street Nature Reserve and exemplifies seasonal changes. The second section traces the history and accomplishments of the Friends Group. The third section showcases over one hundred fifty images of fungi, non-vascular and vascular plants, and invertebrate as well as vertebrate fauna of the reserve.2228 4 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The ABCs of learning disabilitiesThis [book] traces the history of the learning disabilities field and presents the standard gamut of topics subsumed in the history of the field. These include, but are not limited to, the origins of the learning disability field, the influential definitions of learning disabilities, the characteristics of individuals with learning disabilities, the condition of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and the etiology of learning disabilities. The [book] concludes with an assessment of the current hot topic of the response to instruction model as an alternative to the IQ-achievement discrepancy model of diagnosing learning disabilities and boldly raises the question of contributions of the research of response to instruction (RTI standard-protocol approach) to the learning disabilities field.1911 5 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Aboriginal Ways of Using EnglishThe majority of Australian Aboriginal people speak some kind of English. But often this is not quite the same as English spoken by other Australians. This book presents results of sociolinguistic research about Aboriginal ways of using English in non-remote Australia, by bringing together a number of my publications over a thirty-year period. The focus is on language and communication of Aboriginal people who speak English as their first and main language, and who do not speak a traditional language fluently.2374 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Aborigines & Activism: Race, Aborigines & the Coming of the Sixties to AustraliaIn a provocative reappraisal of the 1960s, 'Aborigines & Activism' recontextualises the history of Aboriginal activism within wider international movements. Concurrent to anti-war protests, women's movements, burgeoning civil rights activism in the United States and the struggles of South Africa's anti-apartheid freedom fighters, dramatic political changes took place in 'assimilated' Australia that challenged its status quo. From the early days of grassroots resistance through to Charles Perkins' 1965 Freedom Ride, the 1967 Referendum, Canberra's Tent Embassy and beyond, this is the story of the Great Southern Land's racial awakening - a time when Aborigines and their white supporters achieved paradigmatic shifts in the search for equality, justice and human dignity that still has powerful implications for 21st century Australia.1270 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Accessible HegelHegel is one of the greatest philosophers of all time – by some peoples' reckoning, he would rank first. Certainly his comprehensiveness of outlook and ability to draw diverse and opposing ideas and modes of experience together into a unified rational account of reality are unmatched.If you are at all like me, a first encounter with Hegel will be somewhat daunting, but you will also learn from it that something in his profound vision of things speaks to your inner self, and you can't let him go after that. The territory he explores – where human activities are shown to be exquisitely rich and full of surprises and deeper meanings – strikes one as strange,yet often oddly familiar. Hegel tells a story that is nothing less than the philosophical history of civilization and what he took to be its most significant accomplishments, in which each participant has had an identity and a role to play. Anyone can therefore profit enormously from reading it.To say that digesting Hegel's works requires special effort would be a classic understatement. When you begin reading, everything seems rather overwhelming; your head is swimming and it's hard to get your bearings or to feel sure that you have made any advance. You re-read, perhaps, but this helps only a little. Then, after a while, the task gets easier, as you persist and press on. Somewhere down the line, things start to fall into place, and you see the overall configuration of his system taking shape. Finally, the details also make sense, and you look back with much improved comprehension and confidence at the texts that had once left you so baffled. What I have described is not an unusual scenario when one attacks a demanding author in any field, and this should be remembered in order to counteract discouragement. My final piece of advice is this: Let Hegel's words wash over you, so to speak, in the justifiable expectation that you will understand much better in the end.1398 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Activities To Enhance Social, Emotional, And Problem-Solving Skills: Seventy-Six Activities That Teach Children, Adolescents, and Adults Skills Crucial to Success in LifeWe began work on the first edition of this book by searching other books, journal articles, the Internet, and the memories of colleagues. We based some of the activities on classic parlor activities such as charades. Some activities we made up whole, using creative processes that defy easy explanation. Once we had developed a number of activity ideas, we created a standard presentation format that includes suggestions about how to help participants transfer to their everyday lives the skills they learn engaging in the activities. For field testing the activities, we created a standard evaluation strategy that focused on the extent to which participants enjoyed the activity and the extent to which the activity produced the types of experiences that occur in sophisticated training or counseling. For example,John realized, as a result of engaging in some of the activities, that he could stand to improve his ability to take the perspective of others with whom he interacts and to understand their motivations and emotions. One night he played poor tennis, and a friend beat him for the first time ever. John felt unhappy and started to leave, saying little. Then he thought about engaging in the "Losing Well" activity with a group of children, and he called the other participant over to his car and praised him for his outstanding playing. The friend smiled-and then pointed out that John's tires were badly in need of air. He was right, and John saved the tires by adding air.John later thought that he now had a new anecdote to share with clients-and his children-about how using a good social style, specifically being a good loser, pays off, sometimes in surprising ways.2059 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Adaptable TV: Rewiring the TextThis book focuses on the significantly under-explored relationship between televisual culture and adaptation studies in what is now commonly regarded as the 'Golden Age' of contemporary TV drama. Adaptable TV: Rewiring the Text does not simply concentrate on traditional types of adaptation, such as reboots, remakes and sequels, but broadens the scope of enquiry to examine a diverse range of experimental adaptive types that are emerging within an ever-changing TV landscape. With a particular focus on the serial narrative form, and with case studies that include Penny Dreadful, Fargo, The Night Of and Orange is the New Black, this study is essential reading for anyone who is interested in the complex interplay between television studies and adaptation studies.2533 3 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
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BookPublication Adorno and the Modern Ethos of FreedomDelivering a concise and lucid account of Adorno's response to the modern question of freedom, Hearfield sets into critical relief six other modern philosophies of freedom from Kant, Hegel, Nietzchem Heideggerm Foucault and Habermas. The book presents a broad variety of perspectives concerning the question of freedom, and draws out the contrasting and superior merit of Adorno's response. Hearfield employs an interpretive framework that makes a distinction between a conceptual ratio (Kantm Hegel and Habermas) and an existential 'poiesis' (Nietzsche, Heidegger and Foucault). The book includes singular reconstructions of Adorno's immanent critiques of Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche and Heidegger, and demonstrates the theoretical instabilities peculiar to Foucault and Habermas. The book concludes by revealing the respective 'blind spots' in the conceptual ratio and existential 'poiesis' modes of thinking, which block our capacity for becoming free.1192 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication All the Abbé's Women: Power and Misogyny in Seventeenth-Century France, through the Writings of Abbé d'AubignacThe image of François Hédelin as a tightrope walker is an amusing one, given the abbé's reputation as a stern and inflexible dramatic theoretician in seventeenth-century France. Nevertheless, it is this comparison that accurately represents abbé d'Aubignac's philosophical attitude towards the female sex. What is striking about all of Hédelin's fictional output is that the principal focus of his work is women - women of high political and social standing. One may speculate that the composition of these works is, in part, a manifestation of the abbé's fantasies about women, however subtle and innocent these notions appear to be.2186 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication All Work No Pay: Australian Civilian Volunteers in WarAustralians have always volunteered to help in emergencies, especially when the nation has been at war. During the Boer War and the First and Second World Wars, volunteers from all walks of life raised money, assisted with nursing and rehabilitation, and provided food and clothing. Servicemen and women were helped both at home and in the field. The main wartime volunteer organisations were the Australian Red Cross, the Australian Comforts Funds, the Salvation Army, and the YMCA with the YWCA. Their story and the stories of countless wartime civilian volunteers is told here, revealing important aspects of Australian social and political life.2164 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Aloysius Bertrand's 'Gaspard de la Nuit': Beyond the Prose Poem"The author is a captive of his epoch, of his own present. Subsequent times liberate him from this captivity, and literary scholarship is called upon to assist in this liberation". What was perhaps missing from this declaration by Mikhail Bakhtin in his 'Response to a Question from Novy Mir' is that an author can also be a captive of subsequent times - of his critical reception - and become a victim of the opinion of his/her posthumous readership. For a long time Aloysius Bertrand (1807-1841) has been treated as a minor poet and classed under the controversial label of petit romantique; his name has been deemed worth mentioning mainly because of his role as the author of the first collection of prose poetry in France. Bertrand himself seemed to have glimpsed this possible destiny of his work. ... This study of Bertrand's 'Gaspard de la Nuit' will attempt to show that the task of literary scholarship can sometimes be that of freeing an author from his/her canonical critical consideration by recovering the original context of the author's creation. In so doing, we may open up new interpretative possibilities.2548 3 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Ambiguous Gender in Early Modern Spain and Portugal: Inquisitors, Doctors and the Transgression of Gender NormsFrom the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries, the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions conducted a number of trials against individuals accused by members of their communities of being of the other gender – men accused of being women and women accused of being men – or even hermaphrodites. Using new inquisitorial sources, this study examines the complexities revolving around transgenderism and the construction of gender identity in the early modern Iberian World. It throws light upon the manner in which the Inquisition, medical practitioners and the wider society in Spain and Portugal responded to transgenderism and on the self-perception of individuals whose behaviour, whether consciously or unconsciously, flouted these social and sexual conventions.1679 8 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The American Idea of England, 1776-1840: Transatlantic WritingThe American Revolution may have severed a formal political connection with Britain, but it could not destroy what Richard Rush called 'a tie ... light as air, and unseen; but stronger than links of iron'. The Anglo-American relationship was far too broad and equally too deep and complex to be instantly obliterated simply by political change, however fervently proposed and dramatically achieved. Family attachments, professional and intellectual associations, the pull of history, economic links, and an ongoing affinity with English values and culture, especially the English language - according to New England theologian and writer Timothy Dwight, 'this mighty advantage' - meant that independence simply created a new set of circumstances under which an Anglo-American relationship could be reconstituted, revisited and revised. What had changed, of course, was that political severance also created a new nation. Susan Manning describes the Declaration of Independence as having 'sustained a double identity for America in both a unifying and a seceding frame'. Certainly attached to England through history, heritage and culture; nevertheless, the new nation was forced into existence while still bereft of a readily definable individual character. The political and cultural directions of the nation were neither wholly clear nor agreed upon, and the stories needed to articulate a developing nationhood were yet to be written and embraced by the people. Clearly, it was one thing to achieve political separation and to muster a purposeful sense of unity in the process - John Adams's 13 clocks striking together; it was quite another to understand, and live out, the full and diverse implications of independence.2175 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Ancient GordionAncient Gordion has long been recognized as a key Iron Age site for Anatolia and the eastern Mediterranean. Archaeological research has revealed much about its sequence of occupation. However, as yet no study has explored the underlying drivers of political and economic change at this site. This volume presents an overview of the political and economic histories supporting emergent elites and how they constructed power at Gordion during the Iron Age (1200-300 BCE). Based on geochemical and typological analysis of nearly 2000 Late Bronze Age to Hellenistic ceramic samples, the volume contextualizes this primary dataset through the lens of ceramic production, consumption, exchange and emulation. Synthesizing site data sets, the volume more broadly contributes to our understanding of the pivotal role of groups and their economic, social, and ritual practices in the creation of complex societies.
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BookPublication The Ancient Greeks in their own WordsThis volume offers an eyewitness account of life in the classical world. The author has selected a series of telling extracts from Greek literature to provide a picture of the customs, concerns and underlying values of the ancient Greeks. The Greeks speak for themselves, both in the formal language of public office and in the colloquial speech of the household and the street. Their words reveal activities and opinions which are sometimes remarkably similar to those of the modern day, but which are otherwise so different that they are difficult for us to understand. The extracts have been selected from a variety of sources and record not only the lives of famous Greeks, but - perhaps more importantly - offer an insight into the lives of more ordinary individuals. Poetry, hymns and war-songs are included, as are quotations from official documents, inscriptions, laws, histories, funerary monuments, war-memorials and graffiti. This compilation gives an impression of the public and private facets of Greek life, providing an insight into the mentality of the Greeks.1327 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Ancient Greeks: History and culture from archaic times to the death of AlexanderFifteen years after the first publication of the sourcebook 'Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Socrates', when we were finalising the third edition of that work, now expanded in its historical range down to the death of Alexander III 'the Great' of Macedon, we decided that it was finally time to provide the sourcebook with a related textbook so that students could use the two in tandem. This new definitive historical study of the period c. 800-323 BC gives students the full background to the texts translated in 'Ancient Greece', thus providing a comprehensive suite of materials for the study of Greek political history and society. ... This textbook has the same chapter titles and subheadings as 'Ancient Greece', and provides students with the necessary background knowledge and details for an understanding of each historical period and social phenomenon of the archaic and classical Greek world. Accordingly, many of the extensive comments accompanying individual documents have been reduced in scope and size in 'Ancient Greece' itself and the background and contextual information is now given in this textbook. The aim has been not only to give a wide range of material from ancient sources, but to accompany this with a detailed historical overview; as with the sourcebook we have tried to give a view of the Greek world as a whole, not focusing merely on Athens and Sparta but on the lesser-known centres of Greek civilisation and culture as well, with the aim of keeping the reader continually in mind of the geographical and chronological scope of Greek history and civilisation. To this end we have provided numerous maps, charts and illustrations: history is not merely a study of literary sources, and in this book we have tried to supplement the historical and literary sources with depictions of the most important and relevant pieces of art and architecture to help students conceptualise the visual and special background to the most important social and political events, as well as personalities and ideologies, in the Greek world.2662 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Ancient Ochres: The Aboriginal Rock Paintings of Mount BorradaileThe rock art of the Mount Borradaile region in the Top End of Australia's Northern territory records an estimated 55,000 years of human habitation. 'Ancient Ochres' catalogues and describes many examples of the rock paintings of the Borradaile region, illustrating the variety and diversity of painting styles and relating the nature and significance of the paintings to the local environmental and cultural history of the region.1531 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Ancient Romans: History and Society from the Early Republic to the Death of AugustusThis textbook provides comprehensive coverage of the political, military, and social history of ancient Rome from the earliest days of the Republic to its collapse and the subsequent foundations of the empire established by Augustus prior to his death in AD 14.
Interspersed through the discussion of the political history of the period are crucial chapters on all aspects of Roman culture, including women, religion, slavery and manumission, overseas conquests and their impact, and life in the city of Rome, giving students a full understanding of republican society, culture, and politics. With over 130 maps, illustrations, and photographs, The Ancient Romans is lavishly illustrated, with a particular emphasis on coins as a valuable historical resource. It also closely references the authors' sourcebook, Ancient Rome: Social and Historical Documents from the Early Republic to the Death of Augustus, second edition, allowing students to engage with the documentary evidence and written sources in a deep and meaningful way.
The Ancient Romans: History and Society from the Early Republic to the Death of Augustus is an indispensable resource for undergraduate students of the Roman Republic and its society and culture, as well as offering a comprehensive and compelling introduction for the interested reader.
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BookPublication Ancient Rome: From the Early Republic to the Assassination of Julius Caesar'Ancient Rome' is a sourcebook aimed primarily at undergraduate students of Roman history at all levels, with some uses also as a research tool for the reader interested in further study. The period covered is that of the Roman Republic from its beginnings in 509 Be to the death of Julius Caesar in 44 BC, and the documents have been carefully chosen to reflect contemporary views ofthe main issues of political and social history within that period. Any sourcebook is naturally open to criticisms regarding the selection of material: the authors have attempted impartiality in their choice of topics and documents, but inevitably some imbalance of emphasis has probably occurred. Nevertheless the main areas of Roman Republican history have been covered in depth, with especial focus on social and political developments throughout the Republic.1435 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Angels in Florentine Iconography and Trecento Musical PerformanceOver the last sixty years there has been debate about the meaning of angels holding musical instruments in Trecento painting. Some regard them as simply symbols of heavenly music" others argue that payments are documented to instrumentalists 'when they made like (fecerunt) angels'. To resolve this issue I have used the quasi-complete catalogue of all Trecento paintings compiled by the late Howard Mayer Brown as a basic data set of images, and two inventories derived from Trecento literature, one of the names of musical instruments, the other of musical 'activities' and generic names of musical performance. From these three sources, I hoped to document musical instruments in pictures, payment records, contemporary chronicles, imaginative literature and music theory treatises.
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Publication Open AccessBookAnimal Bones in Australian Archaeology: A field guide to common native and introduced speciesThis book was developed out of a need for a clear and concise field manual that could be used to make basic identifications of animal bones from archaeological sites in Australia. While there are many excellent manuals that cover the identification of European and North American fauna, and a few that address Australian fauna, there are none that combine common introduced animals with both Australian native species and humans. This manual will be an asset to students of archaeology and faunal analysis, as well as law enforcement, forensic investigators, and the general public. It is an introductory field guide written primarily for Australian archaeologists working on both Indigenous and historic sites. It does not assume any prior knowledge of the mammalian skeleton and includes 16 species commonly encountered in most environments and archaeological contexts. Since it is impractical for a field manual to provide an exhaustive list of all the potential species that may appear, the aim is to provide basic knowledge needed to identify bones and species that are relevant to most Australian contexts. This manual is intended as a starting point for the non-specialist. Identification of bone can be difficult, even for the most experienced faunal analyst, and especially when faced with smaller elements with less-obvious diagnostic features. For this reason, smaller bones, such as many of the small hand and foot bones, ribs and vertebrae, have been excluded from this manual. For those bones and for species not included, as well as additional information, we have added a suggested reading list. Given that bone from archaeological contexts is often fragmentary, making identification much more difficult, definitive identification is always best accomplished by a trained specialist and based on a good comparative collection back in the lab.2462 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Annotated Translation of Sutras from the Chinese Samyuktagama relevant to the Early Buddhist Teachings on Emptiness and the Middle WayThe entire contents of the Pali Sutta-Pitaka have long been available in English translation, but the corresponding contents of the Chinese Buddhist canon remain, for the most part, inaccessible to the English-reading public. A project is under way that may eventually see the Chinese āgamas translated, in their entirety, into English. In the meantime, however, interested readers who are not literate in Chinese have to rely on the still very small number of translations of individual sutras being produced by a few dedicated monks and scholars. The present book makes a substantial contribution to that process, by presenting thirteen significant sutras from the Chinese canon, with Chinese text and English translation conveniently set out in parallel columns.1432 4 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories in the Early Modern Iberian World: Narratives of Fear and HatredIn Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories in the Early Modern Iberian World: Narratives of Fear and Hatred, Francois Soyer offers the first detailed historical analysis of antisemitic conspiracy theories in Spain, Portugal and their overseas colonies between 1450 and 1750. These conspiracy theories accused Jews and conversos, the descendants of medieval Jewish converts to Christianity, of deadly plots and blamed them for a range of social, religious, military and economic problems. Ultimately, many Iberian antisemitic conspiracy theorists aimed to create a ‘moral panic’ about the converso presence in Iberian society, thereby justifying the legitimacy of ethnic discrimination within the Church and society. Moreover, they were also exploited by some churchmen seeking to impose an idealized sense of communal identity upon the lay faithful.2432 15 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Anzac Labour: Workplace Cultures in the Australian Imperial Force during the First World WarThe focus of this book is upon representing the attitudes and experiences of men who served in the military through an examination of their letters, diaries, and memoirs. The environment in which that primary source material was written was not always comfortable, the material used to write with rarely the preferred option, and the time available to write often limited. In addition, the educational backgrounds and literacy levels of these men varied considerably. As a result, there are a large number of grammatical and spelling errors: capital letters are misused, full stops and commas often completely omitted, and words frequently misspelled. In some diaries, sentences give way to short one or two word summaries of daily life. To retain the feel of the material, and to maintain strong links with the thoughts of the diary and letter writers, hereafter referred to as chroniclers, the author has retained these errors in quotes such that they are as they appear in the original source. ... Ultimately keeping the material in this way provides the reader with greater insight into the situation and mindset of Australian soldiers of the First World War. These men were not always given the time or space to think carefully about what to write down, and thus the extracts appear as close as possible to the way they were originally recorded.2360 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Approaches for sustaining and building management and leadership capacity in vocational education and training providers(National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2007) ;Callan, V ;Mitchell, J ;Clayton, BThis report addresses three research questions: • What are the current understandings of leadership in the vocational education and training (VET) sector, and what types of management and leadership capabilities are required for the present and the future? • What approaches to learning and management development are being used? • What is successful and what approaches might be used more often in the future? These research questions were addressed using the findings from interviews in 2006 with 125 individuals employed in 30 training organisations throughout Australia. In terms of the first question about the notions of leadership being advanced, those interviewed, especially at the higher levels of management, embraced the need for a more transformational style of leadership which could deal with the challenges facing training organisations today. This style allowed them to define organisational goals and desired outcomes that typically involved forms of structural and cultural change. They preferred to work with others through participative, collaborative or what were often called 'shared' styles of leading to develop strategies and plans to achieve those change goals. There was also a good level of awareness and understanding of the personal qualities required of effective managers and leaders. These qualities were largely based on the concept of emotional intelligence and included the need for vocational education and training managers and leaders to have skills in communication, to be self-aware, to show empathy, and to be tolerant of ambiguity and change. In terms of the required management and leadership capabilities, most organisations were exploring or had defined what attributes they expected of their leaders at various levels. In the interviews, these capabilities were seen to differ, depending upon the level of management. However, the core capabilities include those related to the transformational qualities of being able to communicate a vision for the organisation, to build successful teams, and to inspire staff to make a commitment to change. These core capabilities also include sound strategic thinking and planning skills, and an ability to be business-like in approach.1601 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Archaeologist's Field Handbook: The Essential Guide for Beginners and Professionals in AustraliaIn one volume here is everything you need to conduct fieldwork in archaeology. The Archaeologist's Field Handbook is designed for every kind of archaeological practice, from simple site recordings to professional consultancies and anyone who wants to record heritage sites responsibly.
This hands-on manual provides step-by-step instructions on how to undertake and successfully complete fieldwork in all fields of archaeology, from Indigenous to historical to landscape work. Charts, checklists, graphs, maps and diagrams clearly illustrate how to design, fund, research, map, record, interpret, photograph and write up your fieldwork.
This second edition is updated throughout and incorporates strategies for digital data capture, improved methods, recent legislation and more affordable technologies for surveying and photography. The Archaeologist's Field Handbook remains the ultimate resource for consultants, teachers, students, community groups and anyone involved in heritage fieldwork.
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BookPublication Archaic Eretria: A Political and Social History from the Earliest Times to 490 BC(Routledge, 2004)Walker, Keith GIt is now sixty-one years since the only study in English of the history of Eretria was written. It was never published, and access to it has been practically impossible for students of Euboian history.¹ Since then there have been a few monograph studies of other Euboian cities in English, but only one has appeared in published form.² There have, of course, been a small number of journal articles on special topics dealing with Euboia but those who wish to pursue Euboian studies must turn to the more plentiful material in French and German, though even in these languages it is almost exclusively to be found in the journal literature. The Swiss scholar Denis Knoepfler has been the author of a massive amount of work on Eretria, especially its epigraphy and related topics. No researcher on Eretria can possibly ignore his contribution.The neglect of Euboia is hard to justify in view of the increasing body of evidence indicating that Euboian cities played a significant role in the history of Greece, especially during the Archaic period. Their part in the so-called Second Colonial Movement to Italy and Sicily has long been acknowledged, but the results of the excavations at Lefkandi and Eretria itself have demonstrated that Euboia had a flourishing civilisation that goes back to the tenth century and even earlier.The principal objective of this study is to exploit the considerable body of evidence embedded in the literary record, along with the results of archaeological investigations at and around Eretria, to argue that the city played a quasi-hegemonial role in the affairs of central Greece and the Aegean during the last half of the sixth century and probably even earlier, while also attempting a re-construction of its constitutional and monumental antiquities.985 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Ariane Mnouchkine and the Théâtre du SoleilThis is the first full-length study of the renowned French theatre director Ariane Mnouchkine and her company, the Théâtre du Soleil. Mnouchkine first came to the attention of the English-speaking world with her 1970 production about the French Revolution, '1789', and later with her Shakespeare cycle influenced by Japanese and Indian theatre techniques, which was seen at the Olympic Arts Festival in Los Angeles in 1984. Today Mnouchkine is recognised as one of the first women directors to achieve an international reputation and her productions, spanning from Shakespeare to contemporary drama, have been widely acclaimed as being in the forefront of twentieth-century theatre. Having worked with Mnouchkine's company in 1985, Adrian Kiernander was in a unique position to observe her directorial style and working methods. In this fascinating study, which includes an interview with Mnouchkine, Kiernander analyses the elements which inform her work as well as the impact she has had on modern theatre. The book will be of interest to theatre practitioners, students and scholars of drama and theatre history and French studies, as well as to the general reader. It includes a chronology of Mnouchkine's productions and theatre career and is illustrated with photographs from productions.2132 2 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Armidale City Public School: A history of 150 years of education 1861 to 2011(Armidale City Public School, 2011)Wilson, Graham JSince Armidale's establishment, the town has become an education centre with the development of private and public schools in primary and secondary education, the Armidale Teachers' College, later the College of Advanced Education, the University of New England and the Armidale TAFE. Established in June 1861, the Armidale Public School has been at the forefront of public primary and secondary education in the town. This book has been published as part of the Sesquicentenary Celebrations to be held in June 2011. It conveys a sense of history for the block of land bordered by Dangar, Mann, Faulkner and Brown Streets. Consequently, it tells the story of the development of the school, the presence of police and their barracks, the loss of historic buildings and even the establishment of an early cemetery and the subsequent removal of the bodies from the grounds. The story tells how the school grew in size from occupying a small area in section 30, the north-western corner, to eventually occupying the total block. It also shows how the school progressed through various forms: a National School, a Superior School, a District School, a Demonstration School and now a Public School. It is hoped that the book will not only revive memories for the teachers, support staff, children and parents involved in the school over many decades, but also serve as a valuable teaching resource for teachers developing local history units in the future. At the end of the book is a time line of local history.2026 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Asketikon of St Basil the GreatBasil was born in c. AD 329 to an aristocratic Christian family of Neocaesarea, the capital of Pontos Polemoniakos. His father was Basil Senior, an eminent advocate and teacher of rhetoric, his mother Emmelia, of the Cappadocian aristocracy. Eustathius of Sebasteia, a renowned, and indeed controversial ascetic leader, used often to pass through the city on his many journeys to and from the imperial capital, for there, in coming up from Armenia Minor he joined the Via Pontica. He became a friend to the family and they to him. Basil Senior died in the mid-340s, whereupon the mother, Emmelia, transferred the family seat to Annisa, a country estate on the river Iris, just west of its junction with the Lycus. Basil finished his 'middle' studies in Caesarea of Cappadocia, and spent 349-56 in advanced studies, mostly in Athens. He returned home to find the family household in an early stage of transformation into an ascetic community due to the influence of his eldest sister, Makrina. Recalled by her from pursuing a secular career in his father's footsteps, he embraced baptism and ascetic life - regarded in those circles as almost coterminous.1197 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Assessing the Economic Impact of Tourism: A Computable General Equilibrium Modelling ApproachThe name 'computable general equilibrium (CGE) model' indicates the main features of this type of model. Equilibrium is a common economic term which means a system reaches a relatively stable state. For example, fluctuations of demand for and supply of apples will cause a change in apple prices: when demand for apples is greater than the supply of apples, apple prices will go up, and vice versa. However, over time, the demand and supply will reach a balance and thus the price of apples will be relatively stable.2466 6 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication 404 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Augustine on the Nature of Virtue and SinAugustine of Hippo is a key figure in the history of Christianity and has had a profound impact on the course of western moral and political thought. Katherine Chambers here explores a neglected topic in Augustinian studies by offering a systematic account of the meaning that Augustine gave to the notions of virtue, vice and sin. Countering the view that he broke with classical eudaimonism, she demonstrates that Augustine's moral thought builds on the dominant approach to ethics in classical 'pagan' antiquity. A critical appraisal of this tradition reveals that Augustine remained faithful to the eudaimonist approach to ethics. Chambers also refutes the view that Augustine was a political pessimist or realist, showing that it is based upon a misunderstanding of Augustine's ideas about the virtue of justice. Providing a coherent account of key features in Augustine's ethics, her study invites a new and fresh evaluation of his influence on western moral and political thought.
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BookPublication Australia's Birthstain: The startling legacy of the convict eraFor many family historians in Australia, the discovery of a convict ancestor raised as many questions as it answered. At an individual level, family origins were explained and myths exploded when the 'black sheep' came to light. Family context in the wider scenario of Australian history became clear. Often, older family members or general family knowledge made it possible to deduce who hid the information, and the research process usually revealed how it was done in a particular case. But major questions remained. The chief question was also the most obvious. Why? Dismissing the cover-up as simply due to family snobbery was too easy. Once they started investigating, family researchers realised that avoidance of convict history extended far beyond an individual story. The phenomenon was too widespread to be dismissed as a purely personal reaction. Family researchers wanted to know why Australian society came to fear its own history to this extent. How did this occur? Why was there such a fundamental national silence that the convicts as real-life characters - whose true stories abounded in success, failure, optimism and in tragedy, triumph and pathos - were forgotten? Was it the crimes they committed in Britain? Or did the source of a birthstain so terrible that it must be hidden lie in the penal colonies? The second major puzzle for many researchers was why their ancestor's story did not fit the established view of convict experience. In so many cases, he did not go to the penal settlements of Port Arthur, or Moreton Bay, or Norfolk Island, nor was there any indication that he was ever flogged. And if the ancestor was a woman, in my case named Susannah Watson, she appeared to use the Female Factory to her advantage rather than dread being sent there, as some major scholarship claimed. Generally, published history as well as popular stories seemed melodramatic and at odds with the stories uncovered by family historians. Family historians were right to be puzzled. For the last 150 years the idea that convict foundations were a blot on Australia's history has shaped political, social and intellectual thought to such an extent it is as though the previous 60 years never existed. The strongly developed ethos of a flourishing convict society is neither remembered nor understood. Its people have been reduced to caricature.1845 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Australia's Water Resources: From Use to Management(CSIRO Publishing, 2006)Pigram, JohnWater is a basic component of human existence and the support systems on which people depend. Along with air, water is one of the most fundamental requirements for the survival of living things. No other single substance has a greater impact on the environment and the uses to which it is put. Water not only moulds the landscape, but also influences the pattern of activities that humans can undertake. ... By the close of the 20th century, after many decades of activity in the use of Australia's water resources, the emphasis on structural solutions to perceived water inadequacy had, in a relatively short space of time, come to an end. In the jargon of the economists, Australia's water economy is said to have moved from the developmental phase to the mature. The focus had shifted from harnessing and using new water resources to more efficient management of existing available supplies for agricultural, urban and industrial purposes. Moreover, less-tangible considerations, and environmental, aesthetic and recreational values of water, were now receiving belated recognition, along with concern for pollution of water-bodies and declining water quality. Such considerations, which were largely ignored during the nation's formative years, mark the recognition of a deeper appreciation of the role of water in Australia. These emerging attitudes to water as a multi-functional resource reflect broader changes that are taking place in Australia - in the priorities set down for resources development, in political and administrative arrangements, and in the social questions and problems that concern Australian society. It is against this background that this books sets out to address the critical water-related issues facing Australia at the beginning of the 21st century and to examine the policies and strategies necessary to manage them.1652 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication Australian Aboriginal Marginalisation in Policy Making and Education: an aftermath of colonialism(LAP Lambert Academic Publishing GmbH & Co KG, 2009)Coopes, Rhonda KathleenThe aim of this chapter is to provide an overall scaffold for the portfolio. Initially, the personal background of the author is discussed to give the reader an understanding of the perspective from which the writing emerges. This encompasses personal history and professional experience. The rationale for the research project presents the statistics which support my personal observations of disadvantage. It also outlines the focus of my work and some of my perspectives on interpreting the causes of Aboriginal marginalisation in Australian society. The structure of the portfolio and the relationship of the chapters are outlined. Research questions formulated to guide the research process are provided and the research paradigm and methods adopted are discussed.1378 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
BookPublication The Australian Army Uniform and the Government Clothing FactoryThis book reveals the business history of the Australian Government Clothing Factory as it introduced innovative changes in the production and design of the Australian Army uniform during the twentieth century. While adopting a Schumpeterian interpretation of the concept of innovation, Anneke van Mosseveld traces the driving forces behind innovation and delivers a comprehensive explanation of the resulting changes in the combat uniform. Using an array of archival sources, this book displays details of extensive collaborations between the factory, the Army and scientists in the development of camouflage patterns and military textiles. It uncovers a system of intellectual property management to protect the designs of the uniform, and delivers new insights into the wider economic influences and industry linkages of the Government owned factory.
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BookPublication Australian Documentary: History, Practices and GenresThe history of Australian documentary has a long list of credits. The list runs from the filmmakers and participants to sponsors, producers, distributors, exhibitors, broadcasters, administrators, archivists, educators, audiences and beyond. These roles have altered through periods of cultural, institutional and technological change in which documentary has taken many different forms. This book explores the relations between these forms and the practices of production, distribution and reception in which they have emerged. It covers the historical developments of documentary in Australia from the early days of cinema to the coming of television and the digital environment. These developments are framed by a series of underlying questions and issues. How have documentary filmmakers pursued purposes of expression, information, promotion, entertainment, interrogation and witness in responding to their historical world, and what are the implications of their work for participants and audiences? In what ways have particular genres and techniques been used to define realities and meet new needs, and from whose point of view? How has documentary been constituted in relation to the category of nation and to international developments in production and distribution? What can be learned from the dynamic history of the form for documentary practice, policy and study, present and future? Our approach to these questions combines institutional history, analysis of forms of representation and practitioner perspectives.2407 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Open AccessBookAustralian Fantasy and FolkloreThe resurgence of the narration of fairy-tales, a feature of the last quarter century, has been related to the contemporary development of fantasy, a genre usually held, in its most ambitious form, to be the best quality writing for children. ... The most luminous modern fantasies which many have designated by the equivalent term, 'high quality' fairy-tales, have been very much akin to the retelling with integrity of myths and legends from many cultures by such a writer as Roger Lancelyn Green, himself an avowed disciple of Andrew Lang. Whether all the retellers, fantasy writers and creators of 'new' fairy-tales would agree with Bruno Bettelheim's argument in 'The Uses of Enchantment' (1975) that "children need the safety valve if the fairy-tale for uncomplicated emotional development", there is no doubt that that literary kind is without rival for its assistance to the expansion of the imagination, of wonder and of the sense of mystery and the poignancy - the lacrimae rerum - of the human condition. For fantasy is the true experimental cauldron used by some of the finest writers and most fertile minds of all times. In the earliest periods, however, the discoverers in fantasy were dealing with the realities of their day, for the monsters and magic that made up their worlds were recognized as part of a real cosmos, a conception which has received re-endorsement by the Australian children's writer, Patricia Wrightson, in her essay, 'The Human Experience of Fantasy': "Fantasy is Man Thinking" (P. Wrightson). Her ongoing argumentation there - so reminiscent and even echoic of Coleridge, Chesterton and Tolkien - finally takes her to her most valid definition: "For me, fantasy is man thinking; thinking about life and reality, but beyond the known facts" (p. 7).2211 1132