This paper interrogates representations of colonial authority, in particular the police force, in three films with a colonial Australian setting that were produced following the Second World War by British or Australian producers: the local production Captain Thunderbolt (1953) directed by Cecil Holmes; Jack Lee’s British adaptation of Australian literary classic Robbery Under Arms (1957) and Harry Watt’s Eureka Stockade (1949), which was the British production company Ealing Studios’ second production in Australia. I argue that the three films reflect differing approaches to understanding Australian national identity through their representations of authority, ideologically influenced by left-wing politics, the global marketplace and Briti...
Australia is the first nation of film. In preparation for the creation of the Commonwealth of Austra...
Set against a background of imperialism, this study uses a comparative approach to investigate gover...
This thesis explores how an idea of Britain’s Empire as a global white republic grew up amongst many...
This paper interrogates the adaptation of two literary bushranger narratives to film during the Aust...
This paper interrogates the adaptation of two literary bushranger narratives to film during the Aust...
France and Australia possess such distinctive national traits that they are not habitually compared ...
Since the origins of Australian cinema, filmmakers have told stories about convicts: those men, wome...
Australian films have gained an international reputation for their whimsical look at everyday life. ...
The five films made in Australia by Ealing Studios in the 1940s and 1950s have largely been analysed...
© [1982] Anne Bernadette HuttonThe primary concern of this thesis is an exploration of the questions...
The battle for the Eureka stockade is an event in Australian history that has been misunderstood and...
This paper attempts to advance new understandings of female cinematic agency by interrogating its co...
This article explores the changing nature of representations of the landscape in Australian film. It...
Firing another shot in the history wars, Prime Minister Howard used his 2006 Australia Day speech to...
Abstract. How can historical fiction tell the truth about the past? Focusing on the disciplinary bou...
Australia is the first nation of film. In preparation for the creation of the Commonwealth of Austra...
Set against a background of imperialism, this study uses a comparative approach to investigate gover...
This thesis explores how an idea of Britain’s Empire as a global white republic grew up amongst many...
This paper interrogates the adaptation of two literary bushranger narratives to film during the Aust...
This paper interrogates the adaptation of two literary bushranger narratives to film during the Aust...
France and Australia possess such distinctive national traits that they are not habitually compared ...
Since the origins of Australian cinema, filmmakers have told stories about convicts: those men, wome...
Australian films have gained an international reputation for their whimsical look at everyday life. ...
The five films made in Australia by Ealing Studios in the 1940s and 1950s have largely been analysed...
© [1982] Anne Bernadette HuttonThe primary concern of this thesis is an exploration of the questions...
The battle for the Eureka stockade is an event in Australian history that has been misunderstood and...
This paper attempts to advance new understandings of female cinematic agency by interrogating its co...
This article explores the changing nature of representations of the landscape in Australian film. It...
Firing another shot in the history wars, Prime Minister Howard used his 2006 Australia Day speech to...
Abstract. How can historical fiction tell the truth about the past? Focusing on the disciplinary bou...
Australia is the first nation of film. In preparation for the creation of the Commonwealth of Austra...
Set against a background of imperialism, this study uses a comparative approach to investigate gover...
This thesis explores how an idea of Britain’s Empire as a global white republic grew up amongst many...