Who was the ‘jolly swagman’ in Waltzing Matilda, Australia’s unofficial national anthem? In this essay I argue that the ghost of the swagman can be heard in a number of recent de-colonising crime narratives. Outback Noir is a relatively recent genre category that describes a new wave of Australian crime films that highlight Indigenous and white relations and take a revisionist approach to traditional history. These films often feature redemption stories that highlight effective collaborations between Indigenous and white policing practices. Uncovering a rural communities’ dark, repressed secrets in order to solve a current problem is a common trend in Outback Noir cinema. I examine Patrick Hughes’ 2010 film Red Hill as an early provocative ...
[Extract] Hurtling toward the hinterland town once nicknamed “The World” to save critically endanger...
In common with many other Western countries, neoliberalism has become the dominant political philoso...
This article examines Australia’s first car crash film: Peter Weir’s ‘The Cars That Ate Paris’ (1974...
Who was the ‘jolly swagman’ in Waltzing Matilda, Australia’s unofficial national anthem? In this ess...
This thesis consists of two distinct but related parts: a creative component, the contemporary crime...
There are many forms of memory in post-colonial Australia, and many kindsof haunting. This paper inv...
There are many forms of memory in post-colonial Australia, and many kinds of haunting. This paper in...
[Extract] This paper discusses the question of the Gothic mode as it has been used to construct a eu...
This paper locates the postcolonial crime novel as a space for disenfranchised groups to write back ...
The international genre of true crime writing has been adapted and reinvented in specific ways in an...
This project is underpinned by a cluster of related questions which stem from the basic premise of t...
This thesis examines the way in which a number of contemporary Australian novels use the contested f...
Windjarrameru (The Stealing C*nt$) tells the story of four young Indigenous Australian men who are a...
This thesis investigates the ‘other’ bushrangers: Aboriginal, African American, Chinese and female b...
Having a personal connection through several family members to the life and work of Ngaanyatjarra El...
[Extract] Hurtling toward the hinterland town once nicknamed “The World” to save critically endanger...
In common with many other Western countries, neoliberalism has become the dominant political philoso...
This article examines Australia’s first car crash film: Peter Weir’s ‘The Cars That Ate Paris’ (1974...
Who was the ‘jolly swagman’ in Waltzing Matilda, Australia’s unofficial national anthem? In this ess...
This thesis consists of two distinct but related parts: a creative component, the contemporary crime...
There are many forms of memory in post-colonial Australia, and many kindsof haunting. This paper inv...
There are many forms of memory in post-colonial Australia, and many kinds of haunting. This paper in...
[Extract] This paper discusses the question of the Gothic mode as it has been used to construct a eu...
This paper locates the postcolonial crime novel as a space for disenfranchised groups to write back ...
The international genre of true crime writing has been adapted and reinvented in specific ways in an...
This project is underpinned by a cluster of related questions which stem from the basic premise of t...
This thesis examines the way in which a number of contemporary Australian novels use the contested f...
Windjarrameru (The Stealing C*nt$) tells the story of four young Indigenous Australian men who are a...
This thesis investigates the ‘other’ bushrangers: Aboriginal, African American, Chinese and female b...
Having a personal connection through several family members to the life and work of Ngaanyatjarra El...
[Extract] Hurtling toward the hinterland town once nicknamed “The World” to save critically endanger...
In common with many other Western countries, neoliberalism has become the dominant political philoso...
This article examines Australia’s first car crash film: Peter Weir’s ‘The Cars That Ate Paris’ (1974...