Why do certain landscapes become contested sites for claims about identity? We approach landscapes as assemblages of human and non-human elements that reach beyond the confines of their immediate physical and temporal locations. Our empirical focus is a small group of pine trees in a Tasmanian suburb, where remnants of human and non-human migration are inscribed and live on in the landscape and in human memory. We demonstrate how the trees simultaneously invite and resist purification through binaries such as nature and culture, wild and domestic, then and now. The histories and futures of belonging assembled in and through these trees are nothing less than active, idiosyncratic and ongoing processes of differentiation that shed l...
This article explores how bushwalking in Tasmania, Australia functions as a performance of ‘everyday...
A richly illustrated science-art story about connections in the landscape, biological and human worl...
Analysing the poetic ecology of the forest as a cultural landscape offers insight into ecocritical c...
Why do certain landscapes become contested sites for claims about identity? We approach landscapes ...
Why do certain landscapes become contested sites for claims about identity? We approach landscapes a...
Drawing from a qualitative research project conducted in Tasmania, this paper proposes that forests ...
The Armidale State Forest is a pine plantation at the edge of the Armidale city in New South Wales, ...
Analysing the poetic ecology of the forest as a cultural landscape offers insight into ecocritical c...
Since their original settlement, European Tasmanians have dramatically transformed the landscape. Th...
This thesis explores Tasmanians’ experiences of forests. Tasmania has been socially and environmenta...
© 2020 Ellie-Rose RogersThe influence of Indigenous management on the Australian landscape is subjec...
© 2014 Dr. Michaela Louise SpencerBy narrating episodes and events which arose in the course of eigh...
A tree farm, in simple terms, is an area of land that has been planted with seedlings of a single t...
This paper argues that the landscape is an important source of knowledge and continuity. The case ma...
Tasmania was a forested land when first sighted by Europeans. It remains essentially a forested lan...
This article explores how bushwalking in Tasmania, Australia functions as a performance of ‘everyday...
A richly illustrated science-art story about connections in the landscape, biological and human worl...
Analysing the poetic ecology of the forest as a cultural landscape offers insight into ecocritical c...
Why do certain landscapes become contested sites for claims about identity? We approach landscapes ...
Why do certain landscapes become contested sites for claims about identity? We approach landscapes a...
Drawing from a qualitative research project conducted in Tasmania, this paper proposes that forests ...
The Armidale State Forest is a pine plantation at the edge of the Armidale city in New South Wales, ...
Analysing the poetic ecology of the forest as a cultural landscape offers insight into ecocritical c...
Since their original settlement, European Tasmanians have dramatically transformed the landscape. Th...
This thesis explores Tasmanians’ experiences of forests. Tasmania has been socially and environmenta...
© 2020 Ellie-Rose RogersThe influence of Indigenous management on the Australian landscape is subjec...
© 2014 Dr. Michaela Louise SpencerBy narrating episodes and events which arose in the course of eigh...
A tree farm, in simple terms, is an area of land that has been planted with seedlings of a single t...
This paper argues that the landscape is an important source of knowledge and continuity. The case ma...
Tasmania was a forested land when first sighted by Europeans. It remains essentially a forested lan...
This article explores how bushwalking in Tasmania, Australia functions as a performance of ‘everyday...
A richly illustrated science-art story about connections in the landscape, biological and human worl...
Analysing the poetic ecology of the forest as a cultural landscape offers insight into ecocritical c...