When I was a doctoral student, a group of students and teaching staff travelled to a coastal village east of Canberra called Kioloa every year, to breathe in the air from the Tasman Sea, which we normally had no chance to be exposed to in the inland capital city
Looking back to the past this paper discusses why Pacific studies and in particular Australasian stu...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2001 Dr. Carolyn O'DwyerThis thesis describes and charts ...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
Paper submitted to Indigenous Encounters: Reflections on Relations between People in the Pacific; ba...
In the 1950s, J. W. Davidson took up the Chair of Pacific History at the Australian National Univers...
The making of Euro-Australia occurred against the backdrop of two dimensions of its historical const...
The travel restrictions implemented to limit the spread of the COVID19 pandemic prevent fieldworkers...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
Introduction to the collection of essays from the fall 1985 graduate seminar in South Pacific histor...
A conference of the Australian Association for Pacific Studies seems a good place to say something a...
For centuries, Pacific societies were sustained by collective knowledge systems premised on a relati...
Travel writing has engendered new interdisciplinary enquiry encompassing numerous disciplines. Among...
It is timely in many senses to reflect on culture and history in the in the Pacific. I join colleagu...
Japanese travel-writers to southwestern Pacific Island battlefields such as Papua New Guinea and Sol...
This lecture is in some ways the ‘lost’ chapter of The Cambridge History of Australian Literature (2...
Looking back to the past this paper discusses why Pacific studies and in particular Australasian stu...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2001 Dr. Carolyn O'DwyerThis thesis describes and charts ...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
Paper submitted to Indigenous Encounters: Reflections on Relations between People in the Pacific; ba...
In the 1950s, J. W. Davidson took up the Chair of Pacific History at the Australian National Univers...
The making of Euro-Australia occurred against the backdrop of two dimensions of its historical const...
The travel restrictions implemented to limit the spread of the COVID19 pandemic prevent fieldworkers...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
Introduction to the collection of essays from the fall 1985 graduate seminar in South Pacific histor...
A conference of the Australian Association for Pacific Studies seems a good place to say something a...
For centuries, Pacific societies were sustained by collective knowledge systems premised on a relati...
Travel writing has engendered new interdisciplinary enquiry encompassing numerous disciplines. Among...
It is timely in many senses to reflect on culture and history in the in the Pacific. I join colleagu...
Japanese travel-writers to southwestern Pacific Island battlefields such as Papua New Guinea and Sol...
This lecture is in some ways the ‘lost’ chapter of The Cambridge History of Australian Literature (2...
Looking back to the past this paper discusses why Pacific studies and in particular Australasian stu...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2001 Dr. Carolyn O'DwyerThis thesis describes and charts ...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...