mmccs annual newsletter 2018 final draft 20.12docx · university learning and teaching: case...

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1 Head of Department’s Message Thanks to you all 2018 has seen another amazing year of achievement for our Department. This newsletter once again reflects the incredibly hard work and enthusiasm you put into your teaching, research and community engagement. There are a lot of achievements not in this newsletter, and the list of publications and creative research outputs, grants and awards listed do not adequately reflect the hard work many of you have put into applying for grants and awards that were unsuccessful. As I have said before, I believe that work is never wasted and is just as important for building on research, publications and grants in future. I also want to thank you and convey my deep gratitude for your collegiality, collaboration and contribution around the Curriculum Architecture project. Conceptually you have all updated established units and redesigned content for the new units across the UG and PG degrees that has produced fresh and exciting degrees and majors that I believe will be attractive to students. I hope you all have a restful and merry Christmas and happy New Year. Nicole MMCCS Newsletter December 2018

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Page 1: MMCCS Annual Newsletter 2018 Final DRAFT 20.12docx · University Learning and Teaching: Case Studies from Sydney and Perth’, in Alice Chik, Phil Benson and Robyn Moloney (eds.)

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Head of Department’s Message Thanks to you all 2018 has seen another amazing year of achievement for our Department. This newsletter once again reflects the incredibly hard work and enthusiasm you put into your teaching, research and community engagement. There are a lot of achievements not in this newsletter, and the list of publications and creative research outputs, grants and awards listed do not adequately reflect the hard work many of you have put into applying for grants and awards that were unsuccessful. As I have said before, I believe that work is never wasted and is just as important for building on research, publications and grants in future.

I also want to thank you and convey my deep gratitude for your collegiality, collaboration and contribution around the Curriculum Architecture project. Conceptually you have all updated established units and redesigned content for the new units across the UG and PG degrees that has produced fresh and exciting degrees and majors that I believe will be attractive to students.

I hope you all have a restful and merry Christmas and happy New Year.

Nicole

MMCCS Newsletter December 2018

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Table of Contents

Head of Department’s Message ................................................................................................ 1

2018 Research Grants, Awards, Fellowships, Nominations ................................................... 3

2018 HERDC Publications ........................................................................................................ 5

2018 HERDC Non-Traditional Outputs incl. Creative Research Outputs ............................ 9

2018 Impact/Engagement ........................................................................................................ 10

2018 Community engagement – film screenings, podcasts, performances, concerts, radio and tv broadcasts, etc .............................................................................................................................. 11

2018 Scholarly presentations, conference papers, research residencies, MQ/MMCCS conferences, seminars, workshops, etc .......................................................................................... 13

2018 Media and events – interviews, reviews, book launches, etc .............................................. 23

2018 Impact: Non-HERDC Publications ........................................................................................ 27

2018 Appointments and Promotions ...................................................................................... 29

2018 Learning and Teaching Awards and Grants .................................................................. 29

2018 Journal Editorships, Expert Panels, Editorial Boards .................................................. 30

2018 Centre for Media History News ..................................................................................... 32

2018 SBS/NITV/PACE News ................................................................................................... 34

2018 HDR and Graduate News .............................................................................................. 34

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2018 Research Grants, Awards, Fellowships, Nominations Jeannine Baker was awarded a British Academy Visiting Fellowship for six months to the

University of Sussex. Margie Borschke (MMCCS), Malcolm Choat (Ancient History), Rachel Yuen-

Collingridge (Ancient History), Emily O'Gorman (Geography & Planning) Donna Huston (Geography & Planning) Rebecca Giggs (English), Project Organisers for ‘The Spectacle of Science: Humanities at the Crossroads of Innovation’, a collaboration between Faculty of Arts interdisciplinary research clusters Markers of Authenticity and Environmental Humanities which received funding of $4,120 as a special initiative by the Arts Research Office.

Maree Delofski was appointed as an MMCCS Honorary Senior Research Fellow. Joanne Faulkner was appointed ARC Future Fellow at MMCCS. Lauren Gorfinkel was awarded a MQ Restart Grant ($10,000) for her project 'Media,

Identity, and Belonging in Schools: Exploring Cultural and Linguistic Diversity in Public Primary Schools’ Online and Social Media in the Hornsby Shire Area' for 2019.

Virginia Madsen, on behalf of the Centre for Media History (CMH), successfully applied

for a $14,940 grant from the Copyright Agency Cultural Fund. The funding will enable the Brian Johns Lecture Series (2019-2021) to continue over next three years. The Brian Johns Lectures will be presented by the Faculty of Arts research centre, CMH, based in MMCCS. The lectures will engage prominent Australians, and aim to foster discussion, explore and provoke ideas and conversations about the past, present and future of the media, publishing, and other cultural and creative industries in Australia, including digital transformations and the impact of changing technologies and globalization. The lectures will build on the record achieved with outstanding speakers from industry, the public sector and the academy: Mark Scott, Julianne Schultz, Amanda Wilson and Morry Schwartz (2015-2018).

Virginia Madsen successfully sought funding for members of the Centre for Media

History including an MMCCS HDR and an ECR to attend the Transnational Media Histories workshop 11-13 Sept, hosted at the University of Hamburg, Germany. Funding provided for return airfares and accommodation for 5 nights in Hamburg. The CMH was able to present research papers and develop a collaborative project funded to date by the DAAD, the German Academic Exchange Program.

Willa McDonald was awarded OSP to be taken in semester 2, 2019 to work on a

monograph that is a cultural history of Australian journalism told through the lives of fifteen journalists from colonial times to the present.

Kathryn Millard and Mark Levine (University of Exeter) were awarded an ARC Discovery

Project Grant of $280,500 (through Macquarie University) for their project: DP190100490 ‘Challenging the Bystander Effect via Documentary Film’.

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Kathryn Millard's film Experiment 20 has been nominated for ‘Best Docudrama’ and ‘Best Short Documentary’ in the ATOM (Australian Teachers of Media) Awards - Industry category. The verbatim noir film was written, produced and directed by Kathryn Millard with a score composed and performed by Andrew Robson.

Kathryn Millard, Tom Murray, Karen Pearlman, and Iqbal Barkat were awarded an

MQ Research Infrastructure Scheme (Large) grant of $121, 548 for ‘Ultra High Definition Cinema Cameras’. David Mitchell and Marcus Eckermann were part of the project team.

Tom Murray’s radio documentary ‘Douglas Grant: The Skin of Others’ was shortlisted in

the 2018 NSW Premier’s History Prize on 9 Aug: http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/about-library-awards-nsw-premiers-history-awards/digital-history-prize-formerly-multimedia-history

Intan Paramaditha’s new novel Gentayangan (The Wandering) was selected as the best

literary fiction of 2017 by Tempo Magazine in Indonesia in January. The book is currently being translated into English and will be published by Harvill Secker/ Penguin Random House in the UK. It received a PEN Translates Award from the English PEN and PEN/ Heim Translation Fund Grant from PEN America.

Intan Paramaditha was awarded a MQ New Staff Grant, $10,000, for her project, ‘Film and

Sexual Politics in Indonesia.’ John Potts and Diane Hughes were awarded an APRA Music Grant 2018-19, $4,000. John Potts and Nicole Anderson were awarded an ARC Linkage Grant LP170101175

‘Digitising the Kaldor Public Art Projects Archive’, $110, 986. Karen Pearlman’s film ‘After the Facts’ won ‘Best Editing in Open Content’ in the 2018

Australian Screen Editors’ Guild Awards Karen Pearlman’s film ‘Digital Afterlives’ won Best Editing at the Portland Dancefilm

Festival, and the Innovation Award at the Dallas Dance Film Festival. Andrew Robson was awarded a Faculty of Arts, Early Career Research Fellowship of

$5,000 in Semester 2 2018 to assist in the completion of a book manuscript. Kate Rossmanith’s book Small Wrongs was long-listed for the national Nib Literary

Award, and was long-listed for the 2018 UK Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction; was highly commended in the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards; and was listed by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age as one of the best books of 2018.

Kate Rossmanith was awarded the 2018 Faculty of Arts Research Prize for Research

Excellence. Jane Simon was awarded a MQ Restart Grant ($10,000) for her project ‘The personal

archive: contemporary autobiographical photobooks from Asia’.

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2018 HERDC Publications Andrew Alter (2018) ‘Recasting Lok and Folk in Uttarakhand: Etymologies, Religion and

Regional Music Practice,’ South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 41(1): 1-10 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00856401.2018.1440895

Andrew Alter and Jasmine Dean (2018) ‘Iconic Imagination: Listening to, and Looking Back at,

the Piano in Early Hindi Cinema’, South Asian Film & Media 9(1): 3-20. Andrew Alter (2018) ‘Encoding Spatial Experience in Garhwali Popular Music Cassettes’,

Association of Nepal and Himalayan Studies, 38(1): 71-80. http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/himalaya/vol38/iss1/12”

Nicole Anderson (2018) ‘A Proper Death: animals, death and the law’, in Kelly Oliver (ed.),

Derrida’s Death Penalty Seminars, Fordham University Press. Nicole Anderson (2018) ‘Animal Ethics’, in Lynn Turner, Undine Sellbach, and Ron Broglio

(eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to Animal Studies, Edinburgh University Press. In Press. Jeannine Baker (2018) ‘ “Once a typist always a typist”: The Australian Women's Broadcasting

Co-operative and the sexual division of labor at the Australian Broadcasting Commission’, Feminist Media Histories, 4(4): 159-183.

Naren Chitty and Sabina Dias (2018) ‘Artificial Intelligence, Soft Power and Social

Transformation’, Journal of Content, Community & Communication, 4(7). Peter Doyle (2018) ‘Hard Looks: Faces, Bodies, Lives in Early Sydney Police Portrait

Photography’ in Donna West Brett and Natalya Lusty (eds.), Photography and Ontology: Unsettling Images, New York, Routledge: 56-71.

Joanne Faulkner (2018) ‘Inocenți și profeți: copilul ca figură a cunoașterii și a criticii în

imaginarul filosofic al clasei de mijloc,’ (translation of ‘Innocents and oracles: the child as a figure of knowledge and critique in the middle-class philosophical imagination’), Post/h/um: jurnal de studii (post)umaniste, 4: 68-96. http://posthum.ro/joanne-faulkner-2

Lauren Gorfinkel and Qian Gong (2018) ‘Perspectives on Multilingualism in Mainstream

University Learning and Teaching: Case Studies from Sydney and Perth’, in Alice Chik, Phil Benson and Robyn Moloney (eds.) Multilingual Sydney, Routledge.

Lauren Gorfinkel, co-authored with Dani Madrid-Morales (2018) ‘Narratives of Contemporary

Africa’ on China Global Television Network’s Documentary Series ‘Faces of Africa’, Journal of Asian and African Studies http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0021909618762499?journalCode=jasa

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Bridget Griffen-Foley (2018) ‘Inaugural K.S. Inglis Address: Making Australian Media

History’, Media International Australia, ‘online first’ (October), DOI: 10.1177/1329878X18805089.

Usha Harris (e-book 2018, print 2019). Participatory Media in Environmental Communication:

Engaging communities in the periphery, London: Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Participatory-Media-in-Environmental-Communication-Engaging-Communities/Harris/p/book/9781138655287

Ilona Hongisto (2018) ‘Realities in the Making: The Ethics of Fabulation in Observational

Documentary Cinema’, in Colin Davis & Hanna Meretoja (eds), Storytelling and Ethics: Historical Imagination in Contemporary Literature and Visual Arts, New York: Routledge: 190–199.

Diane Hughes, co-authored with Belinda Lemon-McMahon (2018), ‘Toward defining “vocal

constriction”: practitioner perspectives’, Journal of Voice, 32(1): 70-78. Julie-Anne Long, (2017) ‘An Unremarkable Routine: tactical moves in strategic places’,

Performance Paradigm - Performance, Choreography and the Gallery 13, December 2017, pp. 80-96. (post 2017 Annual Newsletter inclusion)

Julie-Anne Long (2018) ‘More than bums on seats: Branch Nebula choreographing the audience’,

Runway, Australian Experimental Art, issue #36 (March). http://runway.org.au/branch-nebula-choreographing audience/

Catharine Lumby, co-authored with T. Moore, M. Gibson (2018), ‘Recovering the Australian

Working Class’, in Mike Wayne and Deirdre O’Neill (eds.) Considering Class: Theory, Culture and Media in the 21st Century, Studies in Critical Social Science (Series ed. David Fasenfest), Leiden: Brill.

Catharine Lumby, co-authored with K. Albury, A. McKee, S. Hugman (2018), ‘Ethical Issues in

qualitative research addressing sensitive issues with children and young people’, in L. Grealy, C. Driscoll and A. Hickey-Moody (eds.), Youth and Technology: Pleasure and governance, London: Routledge: 87-102.

Catharine Lumby (2018), ‘Screentime Panics’, in Dangerous Ideas About Mothers. Perth: UWA

Publishing: 49-58. Virginia Madsen (2018) ‘Transnational encounters and peregrinations of the radio documentary

imagination’, in Golo Föllmer and Alexander Badenoch (eds.) Transnationalizing Radio Research: New Approaches to an Old Medium, Transcript Verlag. 2018-10-02, ISBN: 978-3-8376-3913-1 https://cup.columbia.edu/book/transnationalizing-radio-research/9783837639131and https://www.transcript-verlag.de/en/978-3-8376-3913-1/transnationalizing-radio-research/?number=978-3-8376-3913-1

Mary Mainsbridge (2018) ‘Gesture-controlled musical performance: from movement awareness

to mastery’, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, (18 January): 1-18. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14794713.2017.1419801

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Mary Mainsbridge (2018) ‘Gestural systems for the voice: performance approaches and repertoire’, Digital Creativity, 29(4).

Willa McDonald (2018) ‘Redressing the silence: racism, trauma, and Aboriginal women’s life

writing’ in Mediating memory: tracing the limits of memoir. Avieson, B., Giles, F. & Joseph, S. (eds.). New York, London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, pp. 84-298.

Willa McDonald (2018) ‘When journalism isn't enough: “horror surrealism” in Behrouz

Boochani's testimonial prison narrative’, Ethical space : the international journal of communication ethics. 15 (3/4):17-24.

Tai Neilson (2018) ‘Unions in Digital Labour Studies: A Review of Information Society and

Marxist Autonomist Approaches’, Triple-c journal. https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/1065

Intan Paramaditha (2018) ‘Q! Film Festival as Cultural Activism: Strategic Cinephilia and the

Expansion of a Queer Counterpublic’, Journal of Visual Anthropology, 31(1-2): Myriad Modernities: Southeast Asian/Diasporic Visual Cultures: 74-92. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08949468.2018.1428015

Intan Paramaditha (2018) ‘Narratives of Discovery: Joshua Oppenheimer’s Films on Indonesia’s

Mass Killings and the Global Human Rights Discourse’, Journal of Social Identities, Sept 3. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13504630.2018.1514157?journalCode=csid20

Karen Pearlman (2018) ‘Documentary Editing and Distributed Cognition’, in Brylla, C. & Kramer,

M. (eds.) Cognitive theory and documentary film, London: Palgrave Macmillan: 303-319. Karen Pearlman, J. MacKay, and J. Sutton (2018) ‘Creative editing: Svilova and Vertov’s

distributed cognition’, Apparatus: Film, Media and Digital Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe, 6(1).

John Potts (2018) ‘Futurism, Futurology, Future Shock, Climate Change: Visions of the Future

from 1909 to the Present’, Portal Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, 15(1-2): 99 – 116, DOI: https://doi.org/10.5130/portal.v15i1-2.5810

John Potts, Nigel Helyer, Mark Taylor (2018) ‘Heavy Metal: an Interactive Environmental Art

Installation’, Leonardo Music Journal, 28: 8-12. Joseph Pugliese, co-authored with Suvendrini Perera (2018) ‘Between Spectacle and Secret:

The Politics of Non-Visibility and the Performance of Incompletion’, in Jane Lydon (ed.), Visualising Human Rights, Crawley: University of Western Australia Press: 85-100. ISBN 978-1-74258-997-8.

Joseph Pugliese (2018) ‘Unfinished Business of the Frontier Wars,’ in Colony Australia 1770-

1861/Frontier Wars, Melbourne: National Gallery of Victoria: 258-267. Joseph Pugliese (2018) ‘The Souths of “the West”: Geocorpographical Assemblages of Plants,

Colonialism and Race in Sergio Leone’s Metafigural Spaghetti Westerns’, in Muiraquitã: Revista de Letras e Humanidades, 5(2): 11-59.

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Joseph Pugliese (2018) ‘As Above, So Below: Visual Technologies of the Aftermath, Testimonies of the More-Than-Human and the Politico-Aesthetics of Massacre Sites,’ Social Identities.

Andrew Robson (2018) ‘Bernie McGann and Bundeena: Mythologizing an Austral jazz

icon’, Jazz Research Journal, 11(2):177-201. https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/JAZZ/article/view/34526/35048</div>

Jane Simon (2018) ‘Contemplating life: Rinko Kawauchi's autobiography of seeing’, in

Donna West Brett and Natalya Lusty (eds.) Photography and Ontology, Routledge: New York.

Stefan Solomon (2018) ‘The Imitation Game: Jean Eustache’s My Little Loves’ in the

dossier ‘The Second Generation: French Cinema After the New Wave’ in Senses of Cinema, 88 (October 2018): http://sensesofcinema.com/2018/after-the-french-new-wave/the-imitation-game-jean-eustaches-my-little-loves/

Stefan Solomon (2018) ‘Of Mechanisms and Machines: Brazil’s New New Cinema’ in the

dossier ‘Latin American Cinema Today: An Unsolved Paradox’ in Senses of Cinema 89 (December 2018): http://sensesofcinema.com/2018/latin-american-cinema-today/of-mechanisms-and-machines-brazils-new-new-cinema/. Also translated into Spanish as Stefan Solomon (2018) ‘Sobre máquinas y mecanismos el nuevo Nuevo Cine brasileño’ in Revista Icónica (17 December 2018): http://revistaiconica.com/sobre-maquinas-y-mecanismos-cine-brasileno-contemporaneo/

Yuji Sone (2018) ‘Fujiko Nakaya’s fog performance and embodied “nature”’, Studies in

Theatre and Performance, 1-12. DOI: 10.1080/14682761.2018.1506965 Hollis Taylor (2018) ‘Zoömusicology and Mâche’s Colleagues: Notes from the Field’, in

Márta Grabócz and Geneviève Mathon (eds.), François-Bernard Mâche : le compositeur et le savant face à l’univers. Paris: Editions Hermann: 119-135.

Hollis Taylor curated a special edition of Contemporary Music Review, including authoring two articles:

Hollis Taylor (2018) ‘How musical is Australia? A maverick’s contemporary sound

portrait of the fifth continent’, Contemporary Music Review, 37(4): 366–384. Hollis Taylor (2018) ‘Introduction’, Contemporary Music Review, 37(4): 273–277.

Joseph Pugliese, co-authored with Suvendrini Perera (2018) ‘Sexual Violence and the Border: Colonial Genealogies of US and Australian Immigration Detention Regimes’, Social and Legal Studies, 27(3): 1-14.

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2018 HERDC Non-Traditional Outputs incl. Creative Research Outputs

As part of a recording project forming a key outcome of the linkage grant managed by

Denis Crowdy, a group of West Papuan musicians and Radical Son (Kamilaroi/Tonga) met with partners and researchers in Port Vila, Vanuatu. The recording consists of musical and spoken word collective testimony to the 1998 Biak massacre in West Papua. Denis and colleague Professor Heather Horst from Sydney Uni continued their fieldwork exploring social and economic justice issues around the creation and distribution of music in Port Moresby and a number of villages in Central Province in mid-late June.

Peter Doyle's film ‘Slasher Patrol’ for The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ series,

https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces Diane Hughes was commissioned by the Australian National Association of Teachers of

Singing to write a choral piece for 120 singers, ‘Word Song’, to mark the 30th Anniversary of ANATS. The piece was first performed by in Oct and was recorded by Ben Nash.

Julie-Anne Long was invited to present an existing work ‘Val, The Invisible’ and premier

new work entitled ‘#3: Queenie, The Defender’ at Sydney Contemporary, Carriageworks, Australasia’s largest international art fair, 12-16 Sept.

Mary Mainsbridge performed an original musical composition, ‘Steamfields’ for voice,

bass, electronic percussion and body-controlled instrument, at Soma Sonic with Donna Hewitt and Alon Ilsar, as part of the Bondi Feast Festival on 26 July.

Mary Mainsbridge performed ‘Intangible Instruments’ for Vivid Sydney at 107 Projects,

Redfern on Friday, 8 June. The performance explored the intersection between voice and movement, showcasing artist-designed embodied instruments and also featured new compositions by Donna Hewitt and Julian Knowles. https://www.vividsydney.com/event/music/107-presents-frequency

Mary Mainsbridge performed a solo work, ‘Intangible Spaces’ at the Sound and Music

Computing Conference (SMC) in Limassol, Cyprus on 5 July. Kathryn Millard was series co-producer for the archival short films from Alec Morgan,

Kate Rossmanith, Peter Doyle, Tom Murray, Alec Morgan, Kathryn Millard and Karen Pearlman published online at The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ season, https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces

or released via festivals https://www.sff.org.au/program/browse/after-the-facts Kathryn Millard's film ‘Experiment 20’ for The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ series:

https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces Alec Morgan’s film ‘Asio Makes a Movie’ for The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ series

https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces, see article by Paul Daley:

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https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/feb/14/revealed-how-australian-spies-filmed-indigenous-activists-during-the-cold-war

Tom Murray was series co-producer for the archival short films from Alec Morgan, Kate

Rossmanith, Peter Doyle, Tom Murray, Alec Morgan, Kathryn Millard and Karen Pearlman published online at The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ season, https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces

or released via festivals https://www.sff.org.au/program/browse/after-the-facts Tom Murray’s film ‘The Skin of Others’ for The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ series, see article

by Paul Daley: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/postcolonial-blog/2018/feb/27/when-douglas-grant-met-henry-lawson-new-light-on-australias-dark-story

Tom Murray published a 2-part series on ABC Radio National’s ‘The History Listen’

program in July. Ep1: http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/the-history-listen/monstrous-

worm-part-1/9914656 Ep2: http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/the-history-listen/monstrous-

worm-part-2/9914664 Intan Paramaditha’s translated short story collection Apple and Knife was published by

Brow Books in March. Karen Pearlman’s film ‘After the Facts’ premiered at the Sydney International Film

Festival, and screened at the Adelaide Film Festival, Cinewest Oz and the Antenna Documentary Film Festival

Karen Pearlman and Richard James Allen’s dancefilm ‘Digital Afterlives’ screened at 22

international dancefilm festivals and won Best Editing, Portland Dance Film Festival, 2018, and DDFF Innovator, Dallas Dance Film Festival 2018

Kate Rossmanith (2018) Small Wrongs: How we really say sorry in love, life and law, UK &

Australia: Hardie Grant Books. Kate Rossmanith's film ‘Unnatural Deaths’ for The Guardian ‘Present Traces’ series

https://www.theguardian.com/film/series/present-traces Hollis Taylor was commissioned to write, record, and co-produce a one-hour feature, Is

Birdsong Music?, which aired on ABC-RN’s The Science Show in January and will be re-broadcast in December.

2018 Impact/Engagement

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2018 Community engagement – film screenings, podcasts, performances, concerts, radio and tv broadcasts, etc

Andrew Alter led the Macquarie University Gamelan Ensemble, ‘Suara Nada’, in a joint

concert with the Balinese Community Gamelan group, ‘Suara Jaya, on 27 Oct. The concert was held at the Sydney Conservatorium and the program included a new composition by Andrew titled Sundali in which Balinese and Javanese accompaniment styles were used to accompany saxophone soloist, Andrew Robson. The concert also included Sundanese popular music items arranged by Andrew Alter and performed by Andrew Robson (Saxophone) and UNE PhD graduate Kerry Watson (violin).

Jeannine Baker and Kate Murphy (Bournemouth) co-curated a website ‘100 Voices that

Made the BBC: Pioneering Women’. Pioneering Women is published to coincide with the centenary of women’s suffrage in the UK, and explores the contribution that women have made to shaping close to 100 years of British broadcasting. It is the fifth in the series of websites produced as part of the AHRC-funded project Connected Histories of the BBC, based at the University of Sussex, in partnership with the BBC and other project partners. https://www.bbc.co.uk/historyofthebbc/women-pioneers

Peter Doyle curated the exhibition, ‘Peter Chapman Cover Art’ at Macquarie Gallery,

May-June. Julie-Anne Long curated ‘Happy Hour’ at ReadyMade Studios, Ultimo. It was an evening

of performances of some of Australia’s best independent dance-makers: Martin del Amo & Anton, Kathy Cogill, Nikki Heywood, and Tony Osborne, 21-22 April. More info ReadyMadeWorks.com.au/Happy-Hour

Julie-Anne Long curated ‘DanceLIFE Sessions’, Readymade Works Studio, Ultimo,

monthly from 25 August until late 2018. Julie-Anne Long presented ‘Inside Looking Out’ performance at the Performance Studies

International (PSi) Conference, ‘Performance as Network: Arts, City, Culture’, 2-8 July. Catherine Lumby was featured in conversation with Terri Senft on Macquarie University’s

‘Pioneering Minds’ podcast (Episode 53—Changing Media Landscapes, Part 1.) To listen: https://soundcloud.com/pioneeringminds

Catharine Lumby conducted research for and featured in the SBS Documentary ‘Is

Australia Sexist’, aired 4 Dec. https://www.sbs.com.au/programs/video/1375940163724/Is-Australia-Sexist

Willa McDonald’s Australian Colonial Narrative Journalism database was transferred to

Austlit (https://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/12870667), which is the ‘definitive information resource and research environment for Australian literary, print, and narrative cultures’. The database was developed with seed funding from Willa’s earlier MQ Re-Start grant. The move gives institutional recognition to the database and will greatly increase its reach and impact.

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Alec Morgan's short documentary ‘Asio Makes A Movie’ was invited to screen throughout August at an Arts exhibition in Berlin, Germany: ‘Ex-Embassy Exhibition and Text Series’, a section of Berlin’s Project Space Festival 2018. The documentary is part of the series ‘Present Traces’ produced by MMCCS academics, Tom Murray and Kathryn Millard and screened on The Guardian Website.

Alec Morgan’s documentary on the Stolen Generations ‘Lousy Little Sixpence’ (1983) was

selected for the film festival ‘The Power of the Documentary: Breaking the Silence’. The festival screened ‘26 landmark documentary films of the past seven decades from around the world’. It was held at the Museum of Contemporary Arts at Circular Quay and Riverside Theatres in Parramatta from 28 Nov-9 Dec.

Tom Murray’s feature documentary ‘Love in Our Own Time’ was screened in Event

Cinemas across Queensland, and was the centrepiece of ‘Dying to Know Week’ in that state for the week of the 6 Aug. The film screened in cinemas in Brisbane, Cairns, Rockhampton, Mackay, Townsville, Bundaberg, Sunshine Coast and Gold Coast, and a number of local ABC and other media covered the events.

https://palliativecareqld.org.au/qld-palliative-care-film-night/ Tom Murray’s documentary ‘The Skin of Others: When Douglas Grant Met Henry

Lawson’ (2018) was screened and presented at Creating past worlds in documentary film.

Karen Pearlman’s creative research films ‘After the Facts’ and ‘Woman with an Editing

Bench’ opened the 10th anniversary edition of the Zurich Documentary Conference on 22 March. These two films and her dancefilm ‘Digital Afterlives’ had multiple 2018 national and international screenings at film festivals, including:

‘After the Facts’ premiered at the Sydney Film Festival on 10 June and 14 June. It went

on to screen at the Adelaide Film Festival, the Sydney Underground Film Festival, the Heart of Gold Film Festival (QLD), the Antenna International Documentary Film Festival (Sydney), Revelation Perth International Film Festival and the Sydney Underground Film Festival among others.

‘Digital Afterlives’ screened at 22 dancefilm festivals including: Los Angeles Dance

Shorts Film Festival, 23 June; CASCADIA Dance & Cinema Festival in Vancouver, Canada, 2-3 June; San Giò Verona Video Festival; Screen Dance International, Detroit; 2018 Fuselage Dance Film Festival, Seattle, WA, USA; Cinefest OZ(Perth) Aug; CAPITOL Dance & Cinema Festival, Silver Spring, Maryland, 8-9 Sept; Agite y Sirva Festival, Aug 2018; Mexico City, and Puebla Sept-Oct; 40 North Dance Film Festival Sept-Oct; Dance Films After Dark, 30 Sept; International DanceFilmFestival, Brussels, 6 Oct; OGA (Ospizio Giovani Artisti) Video Exhibitions, Rome,15 Oct; San Francisco Dance Film Festival, 11-14 Oct; Portland Dance Film Fest 12-21Oct., Dallas DancefilmFestival, Nov. 2018

‘Woman with an Editing Bench’ screened at the Washington Jewish Film Festival, in the

USA in May, and at the 'International Women of Influence' program at Female Eye Film Festival, Toronto in July, at Lincoln Center in July as part of Karen Pearlman’s a guest filmmaker event at New York City’s Lincoln Center.https://www.filmlinc.org/events/meet-the-artist-karen-pearlman/

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Kate Rossmanith appeared at the Sydney Writer’s Festival on the 3 May on the panel

‘Drawing the Line: The Ethics of True Crime Writing’, and also presented an author talk ‘On Crime and Remorse’.

Kate Rossmanith presented at the Emerging Writers’ Festival in Melbourne on 22 June. Kate Rossmanith made a series of public appearances and presentations about her

recently-published hybrid nonfiction book Small Wrongs. She presented a seminar at the Sydney Institute of Criminology (31 July); and presented on a public panel about remorse as part of the Neuroscience & Society conference (23 Aug). She also visited London, Scotland and Wales, presenting a public talk (25 Sept) and a faculty seminar paper (26 Sept) at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow.

Hollis Taylor performed a concert to the Music Teachers’ Association of NSW. Hollis Taylor received a commission from Ensemble Offspring for a birdsong-based

composition. 2018 Scholarly presentations, conference papers, research residencies,

MQ/MMCCS conferences, seminars, workshops, etc Andrew Alter was invited to present a keynote on ‘Himalayan Drumming’ at the

Mussoorie Mountain Festival organized by the Hanifl Outdoor Centre in Uttarakhand, India.

Andrew Alter led the Faculty of Arts India Study Tour from 8 - 30 Sept. Students received

funding for the trip from the New Columbo Plan (NCP) scheme organized by the Faculty's International Office. The Study Tour visited three of India's premier tertiary institutions: Lady Sri Ram College (Delhi), St. Xavier's College (Kolkata), and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (Mumbai)

Nicole Anderson - As Director and Founder of the Derrida Today biennial conferences,

Nicole organised 6th Derrida Today Conference at Concordia University, Montreal in May. There were 300 delegates from 15 countries, with 5 keynote speakers. The conference was held in both English and French (as Jacques Derrida was French, and working in the French Continental Philosophy tradition). http://derridatoday.com.au/conference/

Nicole Anderson was an invited plenary speaker at the ‘Animal/Non-human’ conference

at University of Chicago in late April. https://voices.uchicago.edu/animalstudies/ Nicole Anderson with Ren Yi signed an MOU securing more cotutelle students from

University of Illinois, Chicago, in Mid-May. Jeannine Baker presented a paper on ‘Researching the history of women in Australian

broadcasting’ at the Doing Women’s Film and Television History IV: Calling the Shots – Then, Now and Next conference in Southampton, UK, 23-25 May.

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Jeannine Baker attended the CAMEo annual conference on ‘Care in the cultural and media industries’ in Leicester, UK, and presented a paper on ‘The long struggle for gender equality at the Australian Broadcasting Commission’ in September.

Jeannine Baker gave an invited talk, ‘Australasian women broadcasters and the

BBC: mobility, nation and empire’ as part of the Part of the Historical Studies Department Seminar series at the University of Bristol, 13 Nov.

Jeannine Baker gave an invited talk, ‘Making airwaves: women in Australian

broadcasting’ at a seminar on ‘Researching women and media’ at Maynooth University, 30 Nov.

Jeannine Baker gave an invited talk, ‘Galley-slaves and stirrers’: Gendered labour in

Australian television’, at a symposium on ‘Gendered career pathways in broadcasting’, Centre for Media and Cultural Economies, University of Leicester, 4 Dec.

Margie Borschke gave an invited talk, ‘Process as product: Using social media in academic

research strategies’ at the Independent Scholars Association of Australia (ISAA), NSW Chapter ISAA NSW’s AGM, 17 May, at the State Library of NSW, Macquarie Street Sydney.

Margie Borschke gave a public invited talk on her book This is not a Remix: Piracy,

Authenticity and Popular Music at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Information on 3 Oct.

Margie Borschke held a research workshop ‘Desire Lines: Imagining Data in Everyday

Life’ at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Information on 2 Nov. Jon Burtt co-presented a paper with circus studies scholar Katie Lavers, ‘The Extended

Body: Imagineering Performers for Future Circus’ at ANU’s Imagineering Science and Circus Conference in April. Program speakers included Jane Goodall (ANU) and Peta Tait (La Trobe). The paper has been included as a chapter in a forthcoming book edited by Anna-Sophie Jürgens (ANU) for publication in 2019.

Naren Chitty spoke on ‘Soft Power and Civic Virtue’ at the Asia-Pacific College of

Diplomacy, Australian National University, on 2 August. Peter Doyle appeared at the Sydney Writer’s Festival on the 3 May on the panel ‘Drawing

the Line: The Ethics of True Crime Writing’. Peter Doyle presented a curator’s talk at Macquarie Gallery, 24 May, on ‘Peter Chapman’s

Cover Art’. Peter Doyle, Centre for Media History member, presented at ‘Truth, Memory and the

Media’, at the State Library, 6 Sept. This symposium was partnered by CMH and the History Council of NSW for History Week 2018. See https://www.mq.edu.au/research/research-centres-groups-and-facilities/resilient-societies/centres/centre-for-media-history/news-and-events/events/events/truth,-memory-and-the-media-symposium

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Faculty of Arts/MMCCS Creative Research Seminar Series facilitated by Jon Burtt: • Willa McDonald, ‘Narrative Journalism and Ned Kelly’s Last Stand’, 6 March • Can Yalcinkaya ‘Nervous Lines - Autobiographical Comic and Graphic Scholarship, 2

May • Jane Messer, ‘Raven Mother’, 15 May • Rachael Gunn, ‘Reconstituting hip-hop’s dancefloor: ‘All-style’ battles and the

(in)visibilization of queer politics’; Tai Neilson, ‘Deathgasm: Toward a Theory of Heavy Metal Humour’, 29 May

Joanne Faulkner gave the keynote at the ‘Childhood Vulnerability’ conference at

Frankfurt on 12 Dec. The paper was titled ‘ “Failure to Thrive’: Imagining Precarity, Sensing Agency, Through Ivan Sen’s Toomelah”

Joanne Faulkner gave a paper at the annual conference of the Australasian Society for

Continental Philosophy (ASCP) on 21 Nov. The paper was called ‘Remembering Oblivia: Collective Trauma and the Wounded Aboriginal Child in Alexis Wright's The Swan Book.’

Joanne Faulkner presented to a roundtable meeting of the MQU Children’s Research

Network on 27 July, ‘The Significance of “the Child” in [Post]Colonial Australia.’ Joanne Faulkner presented on 3 Dec at the ‘State Violence: Themed Research Workshop’

at Macquarie University. The paper was titled ‘Avenging Oblivia: Settler-Colonial Violence and the Wounded Aboriginal Child in Alexis Wright's The Swan Book.’

Bridget Griffen-Foley presented inaugural K.S. Inglis Address – ‘Making Australian

Media History’ - at 10th Australian Media Traditions Conference, UniSA, 15-16 Feb. Bridget Griffen-Foley presented the keynote address, ‘Keeping Company: Encountering

the Fairfax Media Archive’, at the Fairfax Media Archive Symposium at the State Library of NSW on 10 Aug. http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/events/symposium-fairfax-media-archive

Bridget Griffen-Foley presented ‘Looking Backward’ at the Transnational Media Histories

Workshop, University of Hamburg, 12 Sept. Rachael Gunn was an invitational speaker on the ‘Abuse of Power’ and facilitated the

‘Gender & Sexuality’ panel at 4Elements Hip-Hop Festival at Bankstown Art Centre on the 8 and 9 March: https://www.4emp.com.au/

Rachael Gunn, ‘Reconstituting hip-hop’s dancefloor: “All-style” battles and the (in)visibilization of queer politics’, FoA Creative Research Seminar, 29 May.

Usha Harris facilitated a half day community media training workshop to leaders from

the Kiribati Ministry of Education and the Kiribati Climate Action Network on 23 Feb. The group of eight participants were in Australia for 6 weeks as part of the Australia Awards Fellowships’ Resilient Leaders: Leading in Challenging Contexts program.

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Ilona Hongisto gave the following conference papers: ‘To begin again: Serial non-fiction and the form of the true’, NECS – European Network of Cinema and Media Studies conference, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 27-29 June; ‘To be continued: Seriality, truth and speculation in non-fiction media’, Film-Philosophy conference, Gothenburg, Sweden 2-4 July; ‘Pedagogy of Perception: The documentary frame in Sergei Loznitsa’s Austerlitz (2016)’, Visible Evidence conference, Bloomington IN, USA, 8-11 Aug.

Ilona Hongisto was a visiting scholar at Critical Cinema Lab, the School of Arts, Design

and Architecture at Aalto University, Helsinki, 15 June–6 July, and at Department of Media Studies, University of Turku, 15 June-28 Sept.

Ilona Hongisto organised a symposium on 16 Oct, at the MMCCS Screen Studio (with

A/Prof Robert Sinnerbrink from Philosophy) on ‘The Ethics and Aesthetics of Audiovisual Fabulation’. Invited speaker: Associate Professor Gregory Flaxman from the University of North Carolina, USA.

Ilona Hongisto ‘Pedagogy of Perception: Fabulation and the documentary frame in Sergei

Loznitsa’s Austerlitz (2016)’ at ‘The Ethics and Aesthetics of Audiovisual Fabulation’ symposium. Co-organised with A/Prof Robert Sinnerbrink. ‘Modes of Communication’, Faculty of Arts, Macquarie University, 10-11 Nov.

Diane Hughes was the Conference Chair, chaired two panels ‘Singing Voice Research’ and

‘Moving forward: Creative industries and expectations’, was a panel member for ‘Building resilience: Vocal health and care’, presented on ‘Contemporary singing and the singing self ’, co-presented with Dr Daniel Robinson on ‘Kinaesthetic awareness in and for singing‘ and with Belinda Lemon-McMahon on ‘Voice science, neuroplasticity and ways of learning’ at the 2018 National Resonate Conference, 4-7 Oct (ANATS).

Sarah Keith taught the summer intensive course ‘Global Korean Popular Culture’ at

Kyung Hee University (Seoul, South Korea) as part of their three-week Global Collaborative program. Macquarie has recently partnered with Kyung Hee University as an exchange institution

Julie-Anne Long was Chair of the ‘Talking Dance – State of Play’ panel in the Sydney

Festival 2018. Speaking outside the context of a post-show artists talk, a public conversation with NSW connected dance and theatre makers around the making of physically driven work with Narelle Benjamin; Danielle Micich (Force Majeure); Jo Lancaster & Simon Yates (acrobat).

Julie-Anne Long attended Performance Studies International (PSi) Conference,

Performance as Network: Arts, City, Culture; and presented a paper ‘Choreographies amidst Complexity: analysing the independent dance sector in Sydney as a Complex Adaptive System (CAS)’; she was also a member of PSi Networking Artistic Response Working Group, and presented ‘Inside Looking Out’ performance. 2-8 July.

Julie-Anne Long was Artist-in-Residence for the ‘Dance in the City’ research project, 9-22 July at Bundanon.

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Julie-Anne Long was Artist-in-Residence with Laura Boynes (WA) and Adelina Larsson (NSW) for ‘Wonder Woman: solo performance making from a feminist perspective’,10-13 August at Bundanon.

Julie-Anne Long was invited to speak on a panel ‘The Politicised Body’, to discuss her

research and performance practice ‘The Invisibility Project’, as part of Sydney Contemporary, Carriageworks, 13 Sept.

Julie-Anne Long presented a paper, ‘Choreographies amidst Complexity: the independent

dance sector in Sydney at Readymade Works Studio’ at the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies Research Seminar, Sydney University, 21 Sept.

Catharine Lumby appeared on two panels at the Canberra Writers Festival on 25 Aug

https://www.canberrawritersfestival.com.au/program Virginia Madsen was an invited speaker at the Audiocraft Podcast Festival, UTS, Sydney

on the 2 June. Her presentation, ‘Searching for the Australian Sound’, included excerpts of her creative works and was presented before the full conference on the opening day. Other speakers included Johanna Bell, Namila Benson, Brooke Boney and Mike Williams. http://www.audiocraft.com.au/podcast-festival/#festival

Virginia Madsen presented ‘Radio eye, audio vision and the freeing of the feature in post

war German and Australian radio’, a Joint Presentation with Director of the Centre for Media History, University of Hamburg, Hans-Ulrich Wagner, also mentioned by the Hans Bredow Institute: https://www.hans-bredow-institut.de/en/events/the-radio-conference-2018-a-transnational-forum; and ‘Radio art at the ABC: from Listening Room to no room?’ at the Biennial Radio Conference: A Transnational Forum in Prato, Italy (9-14 July). The international event featured over 150 radio and audio specialists and scholars from all over the world. This year the conference was hosted at Monash University’s Prato Centre, Italy. Program available here: https://www.radioconference2018.com/

Virginia Madsen was an invited speaker at ‘The Most Unkindest Cut of All: Public

Broadcasting’s Role in a Strong Democracy’, Northside Forum. Other speakers included Matt Peacock, former staff elected ABC Board member and ABC journalist, and Brett Stone, Labor Candidate for the Federal Electorate of North Sydney, http://northsideforum.org.au/forum-64-the-most-unkindest-cut-of-all-public-broadcastings-role-in-a-strong-democracy/

Virginia Madsen conducted an international research trip partly funded through the ARC

project on ABC Radio National’s history. Virginia interviewed a key former ABC producer and European Correspondent in London. In addition, she conducted archival research at the British Library and met with the Curator Radio, Paul Wilson. In Italy, she visited the Italian public broadcaster, RAI in Rome, and met with researchers and academics there, and arranged for audio documentary archival material to be obtained through Head Archives (Radio) in relation to her project on the history of the documentary in radio.

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Virginia Madsen presented a paper at the Transnational Media Histories Workshop, University of Hamburg, 12 Sept, in the panel, ‘Histories, Archives, Soundings:

achievements and new proposals for working with transnational media and history’. The first paper, ‘A digital environment prototype for collaborative transnational media history’ was based on a $25,000 Grant application Madsen submitted to the Australia-Germany Joint Research Co-Operation Scheme on behalf of the Centre for Media History and in association with Transnational Media Histories co team project leader, Prof. Bridget Griffen-Foley and involving members of the Centre for Media History, University of Hamburg. While this was not successful, the project has some development funding in 2019, 2020 and Madsen will resubmit the project to the scheme in 2019. Madsen’s second paper reflected on another potential collaborative project with the University of Hamburg, Fudan University and Macquarie University: ‘Sounding the port city in time and space’.

Virginia Madsen became Director of the CMH officially from March. The most high

profile event of the year she organised was the 2018 Brian Johns Lecture. This year she secured the eminent publisher and media proprietor Morry Schwartz (Schwartz Media, Black Inc etc) to deliver the lecture at the NSW State Library, titled: ‘Slow News: Thinking in Public’. The event attracted a full house and was followed by a networking reception. The Dean of Arts, Martina Mollering and DVC Research Sakkie Pretorius also presented. Madsen was MC. A significant number of the guests in attendance were esteemed or influential members of the community and media industries. The lecture was recorded (video) by the Sky News Extra team and is available on the CMH website and via our YouTube Channel. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jcPe1R5FcA

Virginia Madsen organised an event in December: the theme was Chinese media history

and the keynote from Fudan University was Prof. Huang Dan, Director of the Media and Journalism school. Fudan is one of MQ's partner universities along with Hamburg University and the event also included two other members from Fudan. This event attracted MQ academics from Chinese Studies and members of other universities Research Centres, including from the University of Western Sydney and Sydney University. This event was recorded and translated and will be available on the CMH website.

Nicole Matthews, along with Elizabeth Convery and Gitte Keidser gave the talk ‘Users’

experience of wearing connected hearing devices: insights from semi-structured personal accounts’ for Audiology Australia, International Conference Centre, Sydney 22 May.

Nicole Matthews and Justine Lloyd presented a paper at the 2018 Society for Social

Studies of Science (4S) conference in Sydney on 1 Sept, entitled ‘Who's listening? Practices of social justice listening within an advocacy coalition for policy change around hearing and deafness’.

Nicole Matthews, with Justine Lloyd, Rebecca Kim and Isabelle Boisvert, presented a

paper ‘Listening to life experience in the clinic’ at the Politics of Listening conference, UNSW, 28-29 Nov.

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Nicole Matthews, Jane Simon, Willa McDonald, Kate Rossmanith, and Peter Doyle presented papers for the ‘Animating Interior Worlds: spaces, objects and selves’ workshop Macquarie University, 6-7 Dec.

Willa McDonald spoke on 10 August at an all-day symposium on the Fairfax Media

Archive at the State Library of NSW. Her talk was about defamation and the work of the investigative journalist Kate McCLymont. Bridget Griffen-Foley gave the keynote address. She was largely responsible for acquisition of the archive by the library. http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/events/symposium-fairfax-media-archive

Willa McDonald presented ‘Narrative Journalism and Ned Kelly’s Last Stand’ on 6 March

as part of the Faculty of Arts Creative Research Series. Willa McDonald presented a paper ‘Beyond Anecdote: Exploring the early history of

Australian Narrative Journalism through the stories of its writers’ at Making Media History, the 10thAustralian Media Traditions conference, Adelaide 15-16 Feb.

Willa McDonald presented a paper ‘Portraying the Unspeakable: The Art of Behrouz

Boochani’, Animating Interior Worlds, Research Symposium, Macquarie University, 6-7 Dec .

Alex Mesker, Centre for Media History Associate member, was invited as an Early Career

researcher to present a paper, ‘Crossing Borders: techno-electronic music and media art cultures as trans-national “new media” history’ for the recent Trilateral MQ-FU-HAM (Macquarie University, Fudan, Shanghai, and Hamburg Universities) Conference organized by the University of Hamburg 10-12 Sept.

Kathryn Millard was an invited speaker at the CIPET (Centre for Elite Performance

Expertise and Training) Annual Conference, Macquarie University on 13 Nov. Her presentation was titled ‘Working towards the edge: Synergy in screen production’.

Kathryn Millard was an invited speaker at the Spectacle of Science: Humanities at the

Crossroad of Innovation event, Macquarie University, 8 Nov, where she screened and talked about Experiment 20. (The symposium was a ‘Markers of Authenticity’ event in association with the Environmental Humanities research stream, sponsored by the Faculty of Arts, the MQ Ancient Cultures Research Centre, and the Centre for Emotional Health).

Kathryn Millard presented on ‘The Colour Wars: The Expansion of Colour in the Post-

War Era’ at the ‘Colour in Context’ Symposium on 23 March hosted by Bristol University. https://colourandfilm.wordpress.com/colour-in-context-symposium-abstracts/

Kathryn Millard participated in the 3rd ‘Colour in Film’ Conference organised by the

Colour Group (GB), HTW Berlin and the University of Zurich, with the BFI and Birkbeck, University of London from 19-21 March.

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MMCCS Research and Professional Development Seminars, facilitated by Kate Rossmanith:

• Gendered Politics of Bodies, Chair: Karen Pearlman, Panellists: Rachael Gunn, Nicole

Matthews, Julie-Anne Long, 28 Mar • Politics of (In)Visibility: Human and Other than Human Agents, Chair: Ian Collinson,

Panellists: Margie Borschke, Rachael Gunn, Tai Nielsen, Yuji Sone, 9 May • Media History, Chair: Virginia Madsen, Panellists: Virginia Madsen, Bridget Griffen-

Foley,16 May • CELab Workshop: Multiplicity, Process, Attention, Awareness, Imagination Chair: Julie-Anne Long, Panellists: CELab members, 23 May • Kids, Sex, Internet: What’s Left? Chair: Margie Borschke, Panelists: Catharine Lumby,

Terri Senft, Joanne Faulkner, 30 May. • Mobiles, Chair: Nicole Matthews, Panellists: Andrew Alter, Denis Crowdy, Usha

Harris, 13 Jun • Arrested/Arresting Ecologies, Chair: Joseph Pugliese, Panellists: Usha Harris, Jon

Burtt, 15 Aug • Interiors, Chaired by Jane Simon and Nicole Matthews, Panellists: Willa McDonald,

Peter Doyle, Karen Pearlman, Julie-Anne Long, Kate Rossmanith, Jane Simon, Nicole Matthews, 29 Aug

• Music Technologies and Cultures, Chair: Andrew Alter, Panellists: Denis Crowdy, Steve Collins, Sarah Keith, Adrian Renzo, Andrew Alter, Mary Mainsbridge, Julian Knowles, Di Hughes, Alex Mesker, 5 Sep

• Creative Documentary, Chair: Tom Murray, Panellists: Iqbal Barkat, Karen Pearlman, Tom Murray, 12 Sep

• Developing and Presenting Your CV, Chair: Bridget Griffen-Foley with Joseph Pugliese, 17 Oct

• Applying for External Grants, Chair: Joseph Pugliese, Panellists: Catharine Lumby, John Potts, Kathryn Millard, 24 Oct

• The Ethics of Research, Chair: Kate Rossmanith, Panellists: Nicole Matthews, Tom Murray, Willa McDonald, 7 Nov

• Developing a Research Program, Chair: Kate Rossmanith, Panellists: Nicole Anderson, Peter Doyle, 21 Nov

Tom Murray, Centre for Media History member, presented ‘Drawing histories from the

archive: Extracting stories’ as part of the Truth and History Panel at Truth, Memory and the Media, at the State Library, 6 Sept. This symposium was partnered by CMH and the History Council of NSW for History Week 2018.

Tom Murray presented ‘(Re)Creating the Past in Documentary Film’ for ‘Different Pasts,

Foreign Countries’, a one-day symposium organised by The Centre for Applied History and the Department of English, 7 Sept.

Tai Neilson participated in ‘Job Loss, Precarity and Work Futures in Journalism: A

Roundtable’ at University of Sydney on 8 June. The discussion involved researchers from around the world and Australia, as well as practitioners and union representatives. It forms part of a suite of research activities designed to support the publication of an international edited collection on the theme ‘What happens next? Journalism and Job Loss’.

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Tai Neilson undertook research travel in New Zealand where he presented papers at the International Association for the Study of Popular Music and Journalism Education Association of New Zealand conferences.

Tai Neilson, ‘Deathgasm: Toward a Theory of Heavy Metal Humour’, FoA Creative

Research Seminar Series, 29 May Intan Paramaditha was at the Sydney Writers Festival in May speaking on the panel

‘Emotional Complexity’. Intan Paramaditha was involved in Cipta Media Ekspresi/ Ford Foundation Workshop

for women artists and researchers in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, 13-15 Oct. Karen Pearlman was invited keynote speaker at the Sydney Screen Studies Network

Conference ‘Dial “S” for Screen Studies’ 12-13 Nov, UNSW, Sydney. Karen Pearlman was invited guest speaker at the 10th anniversary edition of the Zurich

Documentary Conference on 22 March. Karen Pearlman convened a workshop on ideas generation in distributed cognitive

systems called ‘Informal, unstated, and vital’ on 5 April. Karen Pearlman presented a paper at Eisenstein for the 21st Century Conference Monash

University Centre in Prato, Italy. Karen Pearlman was invited to present a ‘Meet the Artist’ talk at the 46th Annual Dance

on Camera Film Festival in New York City, at the Lincoln Center, where ‘Digital Afterlives’ and ‘Woman with an Editing Bench’ were screened https://www.filmlinc.org/events/meet-the-artist-karen-pearlman

Karen Pearlman presented papers at the Sydney University/Sydney Underground Film

Festival Conference ‘Inhuman Screens’ (14 Sept) and three Macquarie University Research workshops: ‘Music, Emotion, Performance – embodied and distributed perspectives’ workshop (13 Sept); CAVE ‘Culture and Cognition’ workshop, (8 Oct); and CAVE ‘Art, Evolution, and Cognition: New Perspectives on Cinematic Narrative’ workshop (19 Oct)

Joseph Pugliese co-convened the Postdam Summer School at Macquarie University in

February. The Summer School included attendees from: Potsdam University, Berlin, Germany; Free University of Berlin, Germany; University of Delhi, India; Duke University, USA; University of Pretoria, South Africa; York University, Canada; English and Foreign Languages University, India.

Joseph Pugliese co-convened the Memorial Event and Exhibition, ‘Uncle Ray Jackson,

President of the Indigenous Social Justice Association: Celebrating a People's History’, at the Redfern Community Centre on the 21 April.

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Joseph Pugliese gave the keynote address ‘Vegetal Nodes of Empire, Diaspora and Settler Colonialism: Transcultural Histories of the Agave and Prickly Pear,’ at the Italian Diasporas conference convened by Co.As.It, Calandra Italian American Institute, Istituzione Musei del Mare e delle Migrazioni Genova and the Ministero dei beni e delle attivita culturali e del turismo in Melbourne on 4-8 April. Additionally, he was the Conference Roundtable MC and Discussant for Italian-Indigenous Relationships: Towards a Decolonial Approach at the same conference.

Joseph Pugliese was an invited speaker for ‘How Do We Have a Conversation About

Islam?’ Symposium, Leo Kelly Blacktown Arts Centre, 15 Sept. Joseph Pugliese was plenary speaker, ‘Ethical Tensions in Criminology,’ and discussant

‘Deathscapes in Conversation with Behrouz Boochani on Manus Prison Theory,’ Encountering Crime: Doing Justice, Annual Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology (ANZSOC) Conference, Melbourne University, 4-7 Dec.

Joseph Pugliese was an invited speaker, ‘Death Justice’: Public Lecture with Suvendrini

Perera on the ‘Deathscapes’ project and ‘Activism and Advocacy Following Contested Deaths: Workshops on Critical Research into Deaths in Contested Circumstances,’ Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Research Centre, University of Sydney, 19-23 Nov.

Joseph Pugliese participated in the UK launch of ARC-funded project ‘Deathscapes:

Mapping Racial Violence in Settler States’, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK, with international panel of academics, activists and journalists, 6 Dec.

Maya Ranganathan presented a paper titled ‘Recording the present: the sifting of the

“real” in the hyper-mediated world’ in ‘The Sense of Time in a Hyper-Mobile Digital Age: Nostalgia, Presentism and Hope Conference,’ Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan, 18 May.

Kate Rossmanith presented on her book Small Wrongs. She presented a seminar at the

Sydney Institute of Criminology (31 July); and a faculty seminar paper (26 Sept) at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow; and she was one of twelve scholars invited to present at a workshop on remorse in criminal justice at Cardiff University (27-28 Sept); and she was one of twelve scholars invited to present at a workshop on remorse in criminal justice at Cardiff University (27-28 Sept).

Kate Rossmanith presented at a symposium at Macquarie University’s Department of

Cognitive Science (13 Sept). Terri Senft was invited to present a keynote, ‘Selfie & Drone: Notes on Method’, at the

Selfie Subjectivities symposium, held by RMIT and Swinburne University at RMIT’s Digital Ethnographies Research Center. For more information, see https://selfiesubjectivities.wordpress.com/

Terri Senft was featured this month in conversation with Catharine Lumby on Macquarie

University’s ‘Pioneering Minds’ podcast (Episode 53—Changing Media Landscapes, Part 1.) To listen: listen: https://soundcloud.com/pioneeringminds

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Yuji Sone convened the ‘Collaborative Robotics: Communication and Social Acceptance’ seminar and workshop with Professor Natsuki Oka on 15 March at Macquarie.

Yuji Sone gave an invited talk, ‘Robot Shaman: Techno-mediation of life and death in 21st

century Japan’, at the symposium ‘Nonhuman in Japanese Culture and Society: Spirits, Animals, Technology’ at the University of Victoria, Canada, on 24 Sept.

Yuji Sone presented a paper titled ‘Alter, the Android Performer, and the Network’ at the

conference ‘Performance as Network: Arts, City, Culture’, the annual conference of Performance Studies International, held at the Daegu Arts Factory, South Korea, on 5 July.

Hollis Taylor gave a lecture to the Music Teachers’ Association of NSW. Hollis Taylor was artist-in-residence, performing and teaching violin and other

instruments, and recording birdsongs at the community school and Warmun Art Centre, WA for the month of June under the auspices of Tura New Music.

2018 Media and events – interviews, reviews, book launches, etc Jeannine Baker was interviewed on 7 April by Jen Fleming, on ‘National Evenings’ (ABC

radio), about the flooding of Adaminaby township and her documentary film ‘Our Drowned Town’; was interviewed (along with Kate Murphy) by Phillip Adams on 3 Dec, on ‘Late Night Live’, ABC Radio National, about the website ‘100 Voices that Made the BBC: Pioneering Women’, https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/latenightlive/bumpy-ride-for-women-at-the-bbc/10579002

Margie Borschke’s scholarly monograph This is Not a Remix: Piracy, Authenticity and

Popular Music was reviewed in peer-reviewed journals: IASPM@journal (Dec) http://www.iaspmjournal.net/index.php/IASPM_Journal/article/view/898; and Media Theory (Dec) http://mediatheoryjournal.org/review-margie-borschkes-this-is-not-a-remix-by-owen-gallagher/.

It was also reviewed in CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries (June) http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A543611345/AONE?u=utoronto_main&sid=AONE&xid=dcd65fcc; and in popular press, The Wire (Feb), and Neural Magazine (March) http://neural.it/2018/03/margie-borschke-this-is-not-a-remix-piracy-authenticity-and-popular-music/

Margie Borschke appeared on ABC iView’s What is Music? ‘What does a DJ do?’

(Aug) https://iview.abc.net.au/show/what-is-music/series/0/video/LE1719H005S00 Jon Burtt facilitated numerous events including Info Days, MQ in a Day, LEAP Widening

Participation Unit workshops, Open Day (up to 100 participants), Well-Being week and other interdepartmental workshops.

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Lauren Gorfinkel and Qian Gong (2018) ‘Perspectives on Multilingualism in Mainstream University Learning and Teaching: Case Studies from Sydney and Perth’, in Alice Chik, Phil Benson and Robyn Moloney (eds.), Multilingual Sydney, was launched at the State Library of NSW on 15 Dec. https://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/events/multilingual-sydney-new-people-new-city.Media: SBS: https://www.sbs.com.au/news/mandarin-now-the-most-common-language-on-sydney-streets-after-english

SMH: https://www.google.com.au/amp/s/amp.smh.com.au/national/the-word-on-the-street-is-in-mandarin-20181129-p50j7p.html

Bridget Griffen-Foley was interviewed about the Nine Fairfax merger by The Wire:

http://thewire.org.au/story/diversity-concerns-fairfax-says-farewell/ Bridget Griffen-Foley reviewed Mike Carlton's On Air, Sydney Morning Herald and The

Age, Spectrum, 12 November. Usha Harris’ book Participatory Media in Environmental Communication: Engaging

communities in the periphery, published by Routledge (e-book 2018, print 2019), received positive reviews:

‘Climate change is the greatest environmental, economic, social and moral challenge of our time. While science can explain, we need stories to connect and inspire. Harris’s book is a celebration of the power and richness of storytelling in the Pacific, not just to illuminate the problems, but to shine a light towards the solutions.’-- Lesley Hughes, Pro Vice-Chancellor and Distinguished Professor of Biology, Macquarie University, Australia

‘This volume is a breathtaking endeavour that shows how today’s big questions are

those related to the intertwining of the local and the digital in environmental communication. Redefining what it means to take a bottom-up approach, this volume gives voice to the island communities of the Pacific, and in doing so, makes clear how much stories and narratives matter to environmental communication.’ -- Pieter Maeseele, Associate Professor and Head of the science and environmental communication divisions of IAMCR and ECREA, University of Antwerp, Belgium

‘The book’s diversity, networking and agency (DNA) framework should be adopted by

environmental planners and social mobilisers. I will not hesitate to endorse this book to environmental workers in the international development assistance community, particularly those involved in climate change adaptation initiatives. Educators should make this work required reading for both environmental science and development communication students.’ -- Alexander G. Flor, PhD, Professor, UP Scientist and Dean of Information and Communication Studies, University of the Philippines (Open University)

Anthony Lambert’s media interviews included: Pioneering Minds, Episode 56: ‘Anthony Lambert on how superheroes are changing the

way we think about diversity’ (1 May) https://soundcloud.com/pioneeringminds/episode-56-anthony-lambert ; ‘The Cultural Phenomenon that is Marvel's Cinematic Universe’ (Interview, 2SER, 1 May) https://2ser.com/the-cultural-phenomenon-that-is-marvels-cinematic-universe/ ; ‘Your television is telling you the future and it's not looking good’ (Interview, Daily Telegraph, 5 May) https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/your-television-is-

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telling-you-the-future-and-its-not-looking-good/newsstory/31af6a81d95fc3294fbdb3525713dd6d; 'Who Can Say what is Cultural Appropriation and what isn't?' (Interview, 2SER, 8 May) https://2ser.com/who-can-say-what-is-cultural-appropriation-and-what-isnt/; 'The Cannes Film Festival Protest' (Interview, 2SER, 15 May) https://2ser.com/cannes-film-festival-protest/ ; 'Royal Wedding: Elizabeth and Phillip' (Interview with Miranda Wood, Sydney Sunday Telegraph, Royal wedding Edition, 20 May); a radio Interview (2SER Mornings, 14 Aug) ‘Crazy Rich Asians and Representation’, https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/e1wkC81Vq2C62vvzIn7lpk?domain=2ser.com; ‘The gender revolution of Generation Z’, interview with Sarah Maguire, The Lighthouse, Macquarie University, was on 6 Sept, https://lighthouse.mq.edu.au/article/september/the-gender-revolution-of-generation-z; SBS News (expert commentary) 22 Nov, ‘Renae Lawrence Returns’; MediaWatch, ABC TV, (Interview) 26 Nov ‘Chasing Renae’; Anthony Lambert (Interview with Duncan Lay), ‘Superhero Movies: Best Marvel and DC films over past 10 years’, Daily Telegraph, 7 Dec, https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/movies/superhero-movies-best-marvel-and-dc-films-over-past-10-years/news-story/64defbc0a16e459ef6603169dda03c60

Catharine Lumby submitted an ARC Linkage grant on cultural diversity in Australian

media partnered with Google and the MEAA. Catharine Lumby media appearances included: Q&A for #MeToo Special Episode, 15

Feb. https://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s4793240.htm; interview for 7:30 Report re NRL player Matthew Lodge, 6 March. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-05/matthew-lodge-incident-horrifying-says-nrl-gender-adviser/9510634; interview for BBC World News, 7 Dec. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ub6387q7rq9pril/BBCSexism.mp4?dl=0

Virginia Madsen was interviewed on national and statewide radio programs this year: by

Sarah McDonald on ABC Radio Sydney's Sunday night national Nightlife program (1 July) on the formation of ABC – also available as a podcast; and by Richard Glover on the high profile ABC Radio Sydney Drive Show (23 Nov for 95th anniversary of first ABC station 2BL). Podcast available: http://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/nightlife/this-week-in-history-the-abc/9929442

Tom Murray’s media appearances included: NiTV, The Point TV show, played a segment

of Tom Murray’s film ‘The Skin of Others’ for its 100th Anniversary of Remembrance Day show 8 Nov, https://www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/video/1352963139934; an episode of 2SER’s GLAM City podcast was devoted to Tom Murray’s history work, August, called ‘Making History with Tom Murray', https://2ser.com/makinghistory/; interviews for various ABC stations about his film ‘Love in Our Own Time’: 90.3 ABC Sunshine Coast with Sheridan Stewart, 8 Aug, 100.1 ABC Wide Bay, Breakfast with David Dowsett, 7 Aug, 90.3 ABC Sunshine Coast, Mornings with Annie Gafney, 7

Aug; interview for the June issue of ‘The Lawsonian’, a magazine devoted to Henry Lawson; interview for a series to mark the 100th Anniversary of the Battle of Villers-Bretonneux, and to coincide with ANZAC Day 2018 and the opening of the Sir John Monash Centre (at Villers-Bretonneux) – Media Heads, 25 April.

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Tai Neilson was interviewed about the Fairfax and Nine merger on Eastside FM 89.7: https://eastsidefm.org/podcast/dr-tai-neilson-talks-about-media-mergers/

Intan Paramaditha’s book Apple and Knife published by Brow Books was launched at the

New Zealand Writers and Readers Festival (8-11 March). The Sydney launch was at Better Read Than Dead on 23 March.

Intan Paramaditha was interviewed by Peril Magazine, 9 Sept:

http://peril.com.au/current-edition/skin-in-the-game/five-questions-with-intan-paramaditha/, and interviewed writer Sharlene Teo for Electric Literature, 13 Sept: https://electricliterature.com/ponti-is-about-how-society-turns-women-into-monsters-b30deb55f4c3

Intan Paramaditha’s book Apple and Knife published by Brow Books was launched at the

New Zealand Writers and Readers Festival, Better Read than Dead, and the University of Melbourne. She was invited to Sydney Writers Festival, NT Writers Festival, Hong Kong International Writers Festival, and Singapore Writers Festival. She was interviewed by Radio New Zealand, Sydney Morning Herald, The Lifted Brow, Peril Magazine, The Wheeler Centre, SBS, BFM Radio Malaysia, and China Daily. Reviews about her book appear in The Monthly, Sydney Morning Herald, The Saturday Paper, The Australian, Readings, Strange Horizons, Mackerel, Tatler, and Belfast Telegraph.

Joseph Pugliese was interviewed by 3CR Radio, Doin’ Time, on the David Dungay

Inquest, 6 Aug: https://www.3cr.org.au/dointime/episode-201808131600/david-dungay-deaths-custody-no-deportations

Joseph Pugliese was interviewed by Ava Kofman, ‘The Dangerous Junk Science of Vocal

Risk Assessment,’ The Intercept, on biometric predictive technologies that claim to detect criminals before the fact of their having committed a crime, 26 Nov, https://theintercept.com/2018/11/25/voice-risk-analysis-ac-global/

Joseph Pugliese was interviewed about Indigenous and refugee deaths in custody and

Deathscapes project on Human Rights Day, by Marisa Sposaro, ‘Doin’ Time’, 3CR Community Radio, 10 Dec, https://www.3cr.org.au/dointime

Joseph Pugliese. Media Review of Deathscapes project: Cinzia D’Ambrosi, ‘Deathscapes Amplifies Horrors of Deaths in Custody,’ Warscapes, 30

November 2018, http://www.warscapes.com/blog/deathscapes-amplifies-horror-deaths-custody

Kate Rossmanith’s book Small Wrongs received positive reviews from leading Australian

writers including Drusilla Modjeska (2 July, Inside Story), with the Sydney Morning Herald describing Kate's book as ‘memoir-writing at its best’ (review by Fiona Capp, 21 July); ‘I love this book. Kate Rossmanith does everything I want a nonfiction writer to do. Small Wrongs is dazzling’ (Claire Dederer, New York Times bestselling author and critic); and ‘Beautifully written… accessible… a particularly useful teaching resource. I have no hesitation in recommending Small Wrongs’ (European Journal of Probation, SAGE); she was featured on a podcast for Good Reading Magazine (19 July)

Kate was a guest on several ABC radio programs, including Conversations with Richard Fidler.

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Stefan Solomon interviewed the Portuguese filmmaker João Pedro Rodrigues, for the

online streaming platform Kinoscope: https://read.kinoscope.org/2018/07/14/self-portrait-exquisite-corpus-interview-joao-

pedro-rodrigues-part-one/ https://read.kinoscope.org/2018/07/15/self-portrait-exquisite-corpus-interview-joao-

pedro-rodrigues-part-two/ Helen Wolfenden presented the News and Current Affairs and Technology and Science

awards at the Australian Podcasting Awards on 5 May in Melbourne. Photos and videos available here: https://australianpodcastawards.com/2018-event-gallery

2018 Impact: Non-HERDC Publications Jon Burtt (2018) ‘Circus Oz’s Model Citizens is a triumph of skill and political satire’, The Conversation, http://theconversation.com/circus-ozs-model-citizens-is-a-triumph-of-

skill-and-political-satire-89761 Peter Doyle (2018) published short fiction, ‘Good Bloke’ in John Dale (ed.), Sydney Noir

New York: Akashic: 229-244. Peter Doyle (2018) ‘Friday essay: the complex, contradictory pleasures of pulp fiction’, The

Conversation, 11 May. https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-the-complex-contradictory-pleasures-of-pulp-fiction-96206

Peter Doyle (2018) ‘Peter Chapman Cover Art’, Macquarie Gallery, Catalogue Essay, 17

May. Bridget Griffen-Foley wrote about the Nine Fairfax merger for The Conversation

https://theconversation.com/ninefairfax-deal-end-of-an-era-for-australias-media-titans-100613; and Mumbrella https://mumbrella.com.au/ninefairfax-deal-end-of-an-era-for-australias-media-titans-531951.

Bridget Griffen-Foley (2018) ‘Keeping Company: Encountering the Fairfax Media

Archive’, Inside Story, (27 Aug). https://insidestory.org.au/keeping-company-encountering-the-fairfax-media-archive/

Anthony Lambert - Interview with Duncan Lay in the article ‘Sitcom TV Gets a Family

Reunion’, The Sunday Telegraph (15 April). Catharine Lumby (2018, Feb) Foreword to The Red Zone Report, End Rape on Campus.

http://apo.org.au/system/files/134766/apo-nid134766-607496.pdf Catharine Lumby (2018, Sept) ‘The Reality is more nuanced than NRL players being

blokey boofheads’, The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/15/the-reality-is-more-nuanced-than-nrl-players-being-blokey-boofheads

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Catharine Lumby (2018, 19 Oct) ‘Screentime panic’, excerpt from book chapter in Dangerous Ideas About Mothers, Spectrum, Sydney Morning Herald, https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/catharine-lumby-on-screentime-panic-20181016-h16pvz.html

Catharine Lumby (2018, Dec) ‘Australia still has a long way to go when it comes to

sexism’, The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/dec/04/australia-still-has-a-long-way-to-go-when-it-comes-to-sexism

Stephen Gibson and Kathryn Millard (2018) ‘The women who defied the Milgram

Experiment’, The British Academy, https://www.britac.ac.uk/blog/women-who-defied-milgram-experiment

Tom Murray published articles for ABC News and The Conversation to support his 2-part

series on ABC Radio National’s ‘The History Listen’ program in July, ABC News: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-17/tom-murray-quest-to-find-

origins-of-lambton-worm/9979250 The Conversation: https://theconversation.com/from-dragons-to-dreaming-serpents-

tracing-the-cultural-history-of-the-monstrous-lambton-worm-100015 Tai Neilson published a review of the book Writers’ Rights: Freelance Journalism in a Digital

Age by Nicole Cohen (2016) in Media International Australia: https://multisearch.mq.edu.au/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid=TN_sagej10.1177_1329878X18758400&context=PC&vid=MQ&search_scope=PC_PLUS_LOCAL&tab=books_more&lang=en_US

Karen Pearlman and A. Heftberger (2018). ‘Editorial: Recognising women's work as

creative work’, Apparatus: Film, Media and Digital Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe, (6). DOI: 10.17892/app.2018.0006.124

Joseph Pugliese, co-authored with Suvendrini Perera (2018) ‘Repetitions of Violence: On

David Dungay’s and Fazel Chegeni Nejad’s Inquest,’ Overland. https://overland.org.au/2018/08/repetitions-of-violence-the-inquests-for-david-dungay-and-fazel-chegeni-nejad/

Joseph Pugliese, co-authored with Dean Chan and Suvendrini Perera (2018) ‘”Same Story,

Different Soil”: The Deathscapes Project Gets Underway,’ Open Democracy, 4 Nov. https://www.opendemocracy.net/dean-chan-suvendrini-perera-joseph-pugliese/same-story-different-soil-deathscapes-project-gets-under

Maya Ranganathan published a review of Lion Köenig (2016) Cultural citizenship in India:

politics, power and media, New Delhi: Oxford University, in Postcolonial Studies. DOI: 10.1080/13688790.2018.1451225 in E-pub ahead of print - 21 Mar.

Maya Ranganathan published a review of Sahana Udupa (2015) Making news in global

India: Media, publics, politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, in Journalism, 19 (7), pp 1028-29, ps://doi.org/10.1177/1464884918781426 in E-pub ahead of print.

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Kate Rossmanith, Hugh Dillon and Jane Mowll (2018) ‘Seeing the unseeable: how viewing crime scene photos can be beneficial’, The Conversation, https://theconversation.com/seeing-the-unseeable-how-viewing-crime-scene-photos-can-be-beneficial-90851

Kate Rossmanith (2018) ‘Essay: How is remorse measured?’ The Conversation, 1 June. Yuji Sone published a review of the book New Media Dramaturgy: Performance, Media, and

New Materialism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017) in Performance Paradigm 14: 146-148.https://www.performanceparadigm.net/index.php/journal/index

Hollis Taylor (2018) ‘Is Birdsong Music?’ Wildlife Sound, 14(3): 53-55. Hollis Taylor (2018) Audio essay, ‘Pied Butcherbird on the First Day of Spring 2017’, AudioWings. CD37, Jan. Hollis Taylor (2018) Music Criticism, Stringendo 40(2):75, 83. Hollis Taylor (2018) Feature: ‘To Teach is to Learn’, Stringendo, 40(2): 20-21. Hollis Taylor (2018) Music Criticism. Stringendo 40 (1), 75-76. 2018 Appointments and Promotions Iqbal Barkat, Ilona Hongisto, Andrew Robson, Yuji Sone were all promoted. Ilona Hongisto was appointed Adjunct Professor (Docent) in Documentary Film at the

School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Aalto University, Helsinki, Finland on 26 April 2018.

Chris Muller and Stefan Solomon were new appointments.

2018 Learning and Teaching Awards and Grants Rachael Gunn and Andrew Robson received a Faculty of Arts PACE Grant for their

project entitled ‘Planning for graduate success: Enhancing employability and career development in the creative industries’.

Diane Hughes received an Honorary Award from the Australian National Association of

Teachers of Singing (ANATS). The award was given in recognition of service to ANATS over a significant period of change and for ongoing commitment to mentorship and guidance within the profession of singing and singing teaching in Australia.

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Sarah Keith successfully applied for a 2019 New Colombo Plan student mobility grant ($13,200). NCP grants provide funding for Australian students to undertake studies or internships in the Asia-Pacific region. This grant will enable at least 4 students from Macquarie University to travel and undertake the Global Korean Popular Culture course (and optionally another course) as part of Kyung Hee University's Global Collaborative summer program. If more students are interested and eligible, additional funding may be provided by Macquarie University to facilitate their travel. This opportunity will be advertised to students in late 2018-early 2019.

Jillian Kramer received a Vice-Chancellor’s Citation for Outstanding Contribution to

Student Learning in the VC’s Learning and Teaching Awards ‘For developing strategies that inspire and motivate cultural studies students to engage with critical theory and analytical skills that will equip them for life-long learning’.

Jillian Kramer received a Faculty of Arts Learning and Teaching Award ‘For designing

cultural studies teaching strategies, units and programs that inspire and motivate students by encouraging productive engagement and fostering the development of independent scholars’.

2018 Journal Editorships, Expert Panels, Editorial Boards Andrew Alter was guest editor of a Special Issue of the journal Himalaya (38.1) titled

‘Popular Music Across the Himalayas’. The Special Issue included contributions from researchers at Royal Halloway, University of Hawai'i, Lady Sriram College and the University of Cincinnati. http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/himalaya/vol38/iss1/12

Nicole Anderson, Director and founder of the Derrida Today biennial conference, and

Editor-in-Chief of Derrida Today Journal. Naren Chitty Foundation Editor-in-Chief of The Journal of International

Communication since 1994; Editorial Board, Global Media Journal – Chinese Edition, Fudan University (2005 - ); Editorial Board, Global Media Journal – Mediterranean Edition, Eastern Mediterranean University (2006); Editorial Board, Global Media Journal – Australian Edition, University of Western Sydney (2006 - ); International Editorial Advisory Board, Journal of Communication Arts (Chulalongkorn University) Editor of IAMCR Newsletter (1996 – 2000); Editorial Board, Global Media Journal – Canadian Issue, University of Ottawa (2007 - ); Scientific Committee of Revista Nau , Communication Research Group, Intercom, Brazil (2007 - ); Editorial Board of Asian Journal of Communication (2010 - ); Editorial Advisor Board of Asia Pacific Media Educator (2012 - ); Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Global Communication; Editorial Advisory Board, Keio Communication Review; Editor of Suranaree Journal of Social Science (2014 - ); Editor, Journal of Media Watch (2014 - ); Editor, Journal of Content, Community & Communication (2015 - ); Editor, China and the World (2015 -); Editor, Communication and Media in Asia Pacific (2018 -); Series Editor, Anthem Studies in Soft Power and Public Diplomacy (cfp launched in June 2018).

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Joanne Faulkner was invited to serve on the editorial board of the Childhood Vulnerability Journal (Springer), and continued as series editor of the ‘Series in Continental Philosophy in Austral-Asia,’ Rowman & Littlefield International.

Bridget Griffen-Foley commenced serving as an Editorial Advisor to the journal Media

International Australia in January, having stepped down as a member of the Board in 2017 after being a member since 2007.

Bridget Griffen-Foley continued serving on the editorial boards of the Australian history

series for Anthem Press; Palgrave’s ‘Studies in the History of the Media’ series; Australian Dictionary of Biography; Media History; Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television; Communication Research and Practice; and Australian Journal of Politics and History.

Bridget Griffen-Foley served on the Council of the Australian Academy of the

Humanities, and on the Advisory Board of the Academy's 49th annual symposium, hosted by Macquarie University, 15-16 Nov; as a selector for the National Media Hall of Fame; as a member of the ‘Sounds of Australia’ Advisory Panel for the National Film and Sound Archive.

Diane Hughes has been elected to the Board of the Australian Voice Association (AVA),

continues to serve on the Board of ANATS, and is the Research Officer for ASME NSW. Diane Hughes is a member of the international Editorial Board of the Journal of Popular

Music Education. Anthony Lambert is Editor in Chief (2009 - ongoing), of the internationally refereed

journal Studies in Australasian Cinema (Taylor & Francis), Print ISSN: 1750-3175, Online ISSN: 1750-3183, 3 issues per year.

Anthony Lambert (editorial) (2018) ‘General Introduction’, Studies in Australasian Cinema,

12 (1-3). Catharine Lumby: editorial board, Feminist Media Studies, Routledge; Council Member,

National Museum of Australia; Board member, Rape and Domestic Violence Services Australia; Committee member, Wellbeing and Education Committee, National Rugby League.

Catharine Lumby was also asked to be an adviser to the Museum of Australian

Democracy on a major new permanent gallery examining the public sphere and the state of democracy.

Virginia Madsen served on the international Editorial Advisory Boards of The Radio

Journal: International Studies in Broadcast and Audio Media; and ‘Radio Doc Review’. She was invited to join the ‘ABC Alumni Ltd’, former members of the ABC, who have formed a new support network and mentoring association for ABC staff and the institution in Australia. See www.ABCAlumni.net.

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Willa McDonald was a judge for the fourth time of the annual UN Day Media Award (formerly the United Nations Association of Australia Media Peace Prize), this year in the category of the Promotion of Empowerment of Children and Young People.

Willa McDonald continues on the editorial board of Literary Journalism Studies, the journal

of the International Association of Literary Journalism Studies. Kathryn Millard was appointed to the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts

(Humanities and Creative Arts) for 2018-20. Kathryn Millard was appointed as a judge for the 2018 NSW Premier’s Literary awards

for the Betty Roland (Film, Television and Radio) Award. Tai Neilson (2018) co-edited collection Research Methods for the Digital Humanities,

published by Palgrave Macmillan https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9783319967127

Karen Pearlman (2018) Guest co-editor of the special issue of Apparatus ‘Women at the

Editing Table: Revising Soviet Film History of the 1920s and 30s’ http://www.apparatusjournal.net/index.php/apparatus/issue/view/9

Hollis Taylor curated a special edition of Contemporary Music Review, 37(4), including

authoring two articles for the edition. 2018 Centre for Media History News

The Centre for Media History at Macquarie University and the Copyright Agency Cultural

Fund hosted the 2018 Brian Johns Lecture on Monday 7 May 2018, at the State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. Morry Schwartz AM, the esteemed book and journal publisher, delivered this year's lecture: ‘Slow News: Thinking in Public’. The lecture was funded by the Copyright Cultural Fund and attracted more than 130 guests, received press coverage and the lecture is permanently available on the CMH YouTube channel.

See more information here: https://www.mq.edu.au/research/research-centres-groups-and-facilities/resilient-

societies/centres/centre-for-media-history/news-and-events/news/news/2018-brian-johns-lecture2

The Centre for Media History participated in the recent Trilateral MQ-FU-HAM

(Macquarie University, Fudan, Shanghai, and Hamburg Universities) Conference organized by the University of Hamburg 10-12 Sept. Members also presented papers in the Transnational Media Histories Workshop, held 12-13 Sept, organized by Dr Hans-Ulrich Wagner, Director of the Centre for Media History in Hamburg. CMH’s Dr Madsen and Prof. Griffen-Foley also participated in a business meeting to plan the next two years of the now Trilateral partnership’s activities and events. Papers and proposals were presented by Director, CMH, Dr Virginia Madsen and joint lead of the project, Prof. Bridget Griffen-Foley in our session: Histories, Archives, Soundings.

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Bridget Griffen-Foley looked back on the achievements of the partnership since 2015, and shared with the workshop insights from her research relating to transnational media history, Australian and US radio. Virginia Madsen presented two papers: the first explored a proposal for the partnership to develop in the next phase: a digital environment prototype for writing collaborative transnational media history, and to be based on restituting and re-sounding significant archives with transnational resonance, impacts or import. This proposal drew on Madsen’s research collaboration with Dr Wagner. The second presentation was designed to open up greater contact in research around a common theme, to involve all three universities (Departments/Centres) working in media and media history. Madsen suggested we could find ways to explore the theme of the port city (Sydney, Hamburg and Shanghai), collaborating and sharing research to ‘sound the port city’ within frameworks of time and (urban) spaces. CMH Associate member Dr Alex Mesker was invited as an Early Career researcher to the event and presented: Crossing Borders: techno-electronic music and media art cultures as trans-national ‘new media’ history. MMCCS PhD candidate Fereydoun Pelarek was also awarded a travel grant to attend the events and present a Poster on his project: ‘Going Loopy – Sound Design Techniques of Live Looping Media’. The CMH participants appear in a video presentation of the Hamburg University Centre for Media History: YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFbt3kS6PtE and news of the event is on the CMH webpages and on the Hamburg University website: https://www.uni-hamburg.de/en/internationales/profil/hochschulpartnerschaften/trilateralnetwork/upcoming-events/workshop-transnational-media-histories.html

The Centre for Media History was also a partner in the special History Council of NSW’s

History Week 2018 symposium: Truth, Memory and the Media. This half-day symposium brought together members of the Centre for Media History and Centre for Applied History at Macquarie University, to explore the intersections of truth and memory in journalism, documentary and feature films, and the ways that crime, in/justice and death are documented and remembered. Speakers covered topics related to the theme of truth and memory in media, including the history of ‘fake news’; the search for Aboriginal sovereignty; the final days of Aboriginal ‘bushranger’ Jimmy Governor; and history on screen. Centre for Media History members presenting included Dr Tom Murray and Assoc Prof. Peter Doyle. The event was held at the State Library, 6 Sept. See https://www.mq.edu.au/research/research-centres-groups-and-facilities/resilient-societies/centres/centre-for-media-history/news-and-events/events/events/truth,-memory-and-the-media-symposium.

Other events organised by CMH include a lecture presented by visiting Director of the

Media and Journalism school, Prof. Huang Dan. This event attracted MQ academics from Chinese Studies and members of other universities Research Centres, including from the University of Western Sydney and Sydney University. This event was recorded and translated and will be available on the CMH website.

The CMH also organised a Digital Humanities Workshop (6 April) at Macquarie

University, featuring Dr M.H. Beals (Loughborough University) and Dr Stephen Wan (CSIRO). Both Beals and Wan illustrated the usefulness of online tools to enhance research. While Beals discussed the rising use of digitised newspaper collections and the use of new analytical tools for project-specific research, Wan discussed how social

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media data can complement other data sources, including interviews and questionnaires, to support research in computational social science. Beals presentation is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46Vg0vLItTk

The Centre currently has 9 major research projects underway, a number of these receiving

external funding from the ARC and other sources. It secured a new grant from the Copyright Agency Cultural Fund for $14, 960 to fund 3 Brian Johns lectures (2019-2021), and applied for one $25,000 Grant to the Australia-Germany Joint Research Co-Operation Scheme. It supported 4 members/associate members of the centre to attend and participate in the Transnational Media Histories Workshop held in Hamburg in September, through access to DAAD funding and one PhD was nominated by the director to access a travelling scholarship to the event, which was successful. The CMH has extended its membership in 2018 and welcomes new members, full and associates for 2019. All details are on the CMH website: https://www.mq.edu.au/research/research-centres-groups-and-facilities/resilient-societies/centres/centre-for-media-history/our-projects. The centre also hosts a facebook page and has an Advisory Board.

2018 SBS/NITV/PACE News The SBS & NITV Media Mentorship program were very pleased to welcome 11 new

Mentees in 2018. Professor Sherman Young along with academic staff from MMCCS helped welcome the new students at an informal gathering on 10 April. Please go to the link to learn more about the students: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ctV6mcYYYO6NXm6O5AZarChSic0asjKQ/view?usp=sharing Kaye Harrison - Program Manager, SBS & NITV Media Mentorship

Fern Mei Sim, third year Media student in the SBS/NITV Mentorship program went to

Morocco via the the Actuality Media Documentary Outreach program to make a documentary, ‘Flowers of Marrakech’. The film was an award winner at the Avalonia Festival (in Rhode Island, USA) and a finalist at the International Tourism Film Festival: Tourfilm Riga (Latvia).

2018 HDR and Graduate News Vanessa Berry, MMCCS PhD graduate, has presented many public talks on her book

Mirror Sydney (which emerged from the creative practice component of her PhD thesis). Mirror Sydney has been nominated for Australian literary awards.

Tess Connery, MMCCS graduate, was hired by 2Ser as their Breakfast presenter starting

30 April.

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Julia Featherstone (MMCCS PhD Candidate): - received a FACCTS grant to present a paper at the Embodiment in Science Fiction and

Fantasy Interdisciplinary Conference, held at McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada (18-19 May 2018).

- received a PGRF grant to attend the Artificial Life Conference at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation Museum, Tokyo, Japan (22-27 July).

Kendall Feaver, a MMCCS graduate, was awarded the 2018 Philip Parsons Fellowship for

Emerging Playwrights by Belvoir St Theatre and Create NSW, and was also nominated for Best Writer in the UK’s The Stage Debut Awards. Kendall’s work ‘The Almighty Sometimes’, the winning work for a Judges Award for the 2015 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting, has also won Best New Play at the 2018 UK Theatre Awards.

Belinda Hopper was the 2018 Don Bank Writer in Residence. As part of that appointment,

she presented three public seminars on her work through Stanton Library, North Sydney Council - in July, September, November. As essential research for her thesis, she travelled in April to Chicago to interview the author Marilynne Robinson, and attended the symposium "Balm in Gilead", a dialogue between international scholars on Marilynne Robinson’s work. Belinda was chosen to present an Early Career Researcher Poster at the Academy of Humanities Symposium at the State Library of NSW in October.

Kath Kenny was awarded Macquarie University Postgraduate Research Fund (Round 1,

2019) Funding of AUD$3,658.04 And the DVC(R) Commendation valued at AUD$500.00. She will conduct archival research and interviews in the US for her thesis.

Jess Klajman, MMCCS graduate, is doing the Weekend Breakfast show on 2Ser. Kevin Lucas (MMCCS PhD Candidate) contributed, as a core member, to the ProVC 360 Outreach Project, which has been

nominated for the Australian Rural Education Award; and presented a demonstration of his VR work, the main part of the ProVC 360

Outreach Project, at IEEE TALE2018 (University of Wollongong, 4-7 December) and also participated in the MQ PVC L.E.A.P Widening Participation Pathways program in Broken Hill (26-29 Nov)

Catrina Ly, an undergraduate student researcher mentored by Tai Neilson, is part of the

Macquarie Undergraduate Research Internship (MURI). Catrina is working with Tai on research about Social Media Editors in Australia's newsrooms.

Kelly Pecina, MMCCS PhD Candidate, received a 2018 Student Encouragement Award

from the Australian Voice Association. The award is competitive and is ‘to foster interest within the community of students studying voice in all its forms’ (AVA).

Fereydoun Pelarek, MMCCS PhD candidate, was awarded a travel grant to attend the

events and present a Poster on his project: ‘Going Loopy – Sound Design Techniques of Live Looping Media’ for the Transnational Media Histories Workshop, University of Hamburg, 12-13 Sept.

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Han Rong, HDR Candidate, received an award for her paper ‘China at the UN’, at the Public Diplomacy Interest Group meeting, at the International Communication Association (ICA) annual conference on 27 May, in Prague.

Newsletter prepared by Jon Burtt, Marketing and Events Director, MMCCS, Dec 2018.