This chapter is a critique of the way in which the documentary Bra Boys constructs history, memory and identity. The Bra in Bra Boys is short for MarouBRA beach in Sydney. Bra Boys was released in 2007, and is the most commercially successful Australian documentary ever released. it tells the story of the Abberton brothers (Sunny, Koby and jay) and their extended Bra Boys surfer gang or 'tribe': a band of multi-ethnic males form the suburb of Maroubra. The film's director, Sunny Abberton, is a Bra Boy himself, and, along with his brothers, offers an overview of Maroubra's surfing history and culture - which includes claims to place, issues of class and race and violent interactions with authority. The localism of the film is well-defined an...
Pat Grant’s graphic novel Blue (2012) tells two stories about the impact of a newly migrant group on...
The feature film Otelo Burning (2011) tells the story of black youth ‘tasting freedom’ by surfing wa...
The Island of Rottnest is commonly known to Noongar1 people as Wadjemup, “place across the river” or...
This chapter is a critique of the way in which the documentary Bra Boys constructs history, memory a...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
While transgender people–Sistergirls and Brotherboys–have reportedly been part of Australian Aborigi...
This dissertation provides a genealogy of the relationship between surfing, the nation, and white ma...
Although there has been various suggestions as to what would be the correct term to use on a phenome...
In this article we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which ...
This article is based on an ethnographic study of a group of Scheduled Caste (SC) male youth in a gl...
In this article, we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which...
In the course of history, surfing has been a vehicle for social protest, particularly in Hawaii duri...
How Does an Invisible Boy Disappear? emerges from a nine-month collaboration with Liverpool Black Wo...
The image of the Australian beach as a place of beautiful waves and sand is popular on postcards and...
Pat Grant’s graphic novel Blue (2012) tells two stories about the impact of a newly migrant group on...
The feature film Otelo Burning (2011) tells the story of black youth ‘tasting freedom’ by surfing wa...
The Island of Rottnest is commonly known to Noongar1 people as Wadjemup, “place across the river” or...
This chapter is a critique of the way in which the documentary Bra Boys constructs history, memory a...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
While transgender people–Sistergirls and Brotherboys–have reportedly been part of Australian Aborigi...
This dissertation provides a genealogy of the relationship between surfing, the nation, and white ma...
Although there has been various suggestions as to what would be the correct term to use on a phenome...
In this article we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which ...
This article is based on an ethnographic study of a group of Scheduled Caste (SC) male youth in a gl...
In this article, we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which...
In the course of history, surfing has been a vehicle for social protest, particularly in Hawaii duri...
How Does an Invisible Boy Disappear? emerges from a nine-month collaboration with Liverpool Black Wo...
The image of the Australian beach as a place of beautiful waves and sand is popular on postcards and...
Pat Grant’s graphic novel Blue (2012) tells two stories about the impact of a newly migrant group on...
The feature film Otelo Burning (2011) tells the story of black youth ‘tasting freedom’ by surfing wa...
The Island of Rottnest is commonly known to Noongar1 people as Wadjemup, “place across the river” or...