The international War on Terror and recent events in our immediate region, particularly Indonesia, have thrown a sudden spotlight on Australian reporting of the Asia Pacific. But Australia has a long history of journalism, travel writing and documentary filmmaking here. This paper draws on Edward Said’s writings on ‘orientalism’ to bring an historical perspective to bear on contemporary factual genres and practices. It highlights three cases, focusing on Indonesia and Papua New Guinea: the travel writing and journalism of Frank Clune in the late thirties and early forties (To the Isles of Spice, 1944), the agit-prop filmmaking of Joris Ivens and the Waterside Workers Federation (Indonesia Calling, 1948), and the explosion of documentary wor...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Considering movements of people between South Asia, Africa and Australia offers an opporrunity to re...
This article examines Australian press coverage of the Indonesian killings of 1965-66, and considers...
The international War on Terror and recent events in our immediate region, particularly Indonesia, h...
Cross cultural reporting: Australian foreign correspondents and the ghosts of colonialism. By Alan K...
In early 2016, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) online news website featured brilliantl...
This year has unfolded new challenges and global controversies for Australia's major media organisat...
Australian foreign correspondents continue to see Asia through colonial eyes. They are the products ...
Ever since Tom Wolfe wrote a 13-page essay entitled “The Birth of the New Journalism: eyewitness rep...
This article analyses how the Australian current affairs programme, Four Corners, which follows a st...
This paper investigates the impact of resurgent oceanic epistemologies on journalism practice in thr...
Current conditions of economic crisis, social upheaval andrapid political change in Indonesia have e...
John Pilger is one of the world\u27s most renowned investigative journalists and documentary film-ma...
This paper gives an historical and current account of New Guinea, a Pacific Island divided between t...
This book offers a wide-ranging survey of Australian engagement with the Pacific Islands in the late...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Considering movements of people between South Asia, Africa and Australia offers an opporrunity to re...
This article examines Australian press coverage of the Indonesian killings of 1965-66, and considers...
The international War on Terror and recent events in our immediate region, particularly Indonesia, h...
Cross cultural reporting: Australian foreign correspondents and the ghosts of colonialism. By Alan K...
In early 2016, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) online news website featured brilliantl...
This year has unfolded new challenges and global controversies for Australia's major media organisat...
Australian foreign correspondents continue to see Asia through colonial eyes. They are the products ...
Ever since Tom Wolfe wrote a 13-page essay entitled “The Birth of the New Journalism: eyewitness rep...
This article analyses how the Australian current affairs programme, Four Corners, which follows a st...
This paper investigates the impact of resurgent oceanic epistemologies on journalism practice in thr...
Current conditions of economic crisis, social upheaval andrapid political change in Indonesia have e...
John Pilger is one of the world\u27s most renowned investigative journalists and documentary film-ma...
This paper gives an historical and current account of New Guinea, a Pacific Island divided between t...
This book offers a wide-ranging survey of Australian engagement with the Pacific Islands in the late...
As travel began to massify in the aftermath of the Great War when passenger ships still regularly st...
Considering movements of people between South Asia, Africa and Australia offers an opporrunity to re...
This article examines Australian press coverage of the Indonesian killings of 1965-66, and considers...