AustLit is a multi-institutional collaboration of academic researchers and librarians from 11 Australian universities and the National Library of Australia developing scholarly outcomes for research and teaching across a wide spectrum of Australian literary, theatrical and print culture activities from the late 18th century to the present. As a forum for scholarly communication, AustLit engages with new paradigms of digital publishing, data creation, sharing, storage and compilation through its distributed networked environment. Through AustLit researchers collaborate on a number of specialist and general projects, creating datasets and other scholarly outcomes for the education and research sectors. AustLit is arguably the most important r...
The ARCHIVER project (Angus & Robertson Collection for Humanities and Education Research), based at ...
The development of the Australian Curriculum has reignited a debate about the role of Australian lit...
In recent years, Australian literature has experienced a revival of interest both domestically and i...
Australian literary studies have, in the past decade, been greatly assisted by AustLit: The Australi...
A unique collaborative eResearch programme has been transforming Australian literature research acti...
A unique collaborative eResearch programme has been transforming Australian literature research acti...
This item discusses connections between the Australian Book Review and AustLit, the Australian Liter...
The exhibition was held in the Rare Books Exhibition space, Sir Louis Matheson Library, Monash Unive...
In response to a focus on reading, this paper examines the notion of reading online; as such it uses...
For the past eighteen months, the eResearch Lab at the University of Queensland has been working wit...
2012, the National Year of Reading (NYR), was celebrated in libraries, schools and community centres...
AusStage, the database of Australian performing arts events, has in 2008 seen the beginning of a new...
This paper discusses how the AustLit: Australian Literature Gateway’s interpretation, enhancement, a...
For the past eighteen months, the eResearch Lab at the University of Queensland has been working wit...
A history of the Foundation for Australian Literary Studies from its beginnings in 1966 to its 50th ...
The ARCHIVER project (Angus & Robertson Collection for Humanities and Education Research), based at ...
The development of the Australian Curriculum has reignited a debate about the role of Australian lit...
In recent years, Australian literature has experienced a revival of interest both domestically and i...
Australian literary studies have, in the past decade, been greatly assisted by AustLit: The Australi...
A unique collaborative eResearch programme has been transforming Australian literature research acti...
A unique collaborative eResearch programme has been transforming Australian literature research acti...
This item discusses connections between the Australian Book Review and AustLit, the Australian Liter...
The exhibition was held in the Rare Books Exhibition space, Sir Louis Matheson Library, Monash Unive...
In response to a focus on reading, this paper examines the notion of reading online; as such it uses...
For the past eighteen months, the eResearch Lab at the University of Queensland has been working wit...
2012, the National Year of Reading (NYR), was celebrated in libraries, schools and community centres...
AusStage, the database of Australian performing arts events, has in 2008 seen the beginning of a new...
This paper discusses how the AustLit: Australian Literature Gateway’s interpretation, enhancement, a...
For the past eighteen months, the eResearch Lab at the University of Queensland has been working wit...
A history of the Foundation for Australian Literary Studies from its beginnings in 1966 to its 50th ...
The ARCHIVER project (Angus & Robertson Collection for Humanities and Education Research), based at ...
The development of the Australian Curriculum has reignited a debate about the role of Australian lit...
In recent years, Australian literature has experienced a revival of interest both domestically and i...