The European colonization of Australia introduced a new population into a continent in which Indigenous people had practiced cyclic burning as a form of ecosystem maintenance since time immemorial. The settlers’ complete disdain for Indigenous knowledge and related practices caused these customs to largely fall into disuse. One result of this was an increased vulnerability of landscapes to bush fires, a factor that has risen to the fore in the early twenty-first century. The fires that have swept across the landscape with increasing frequency and ferocity have provoked fears of a rolling, fiery apocalypse that might make living in many areas of the continent untenable. This marks a new phase of settler anxiety that has been fuelled by exten...
Through a close reading of particular episodes and a focus on the minutiae of action and context, th...
This article explores the significance of the campfire to Australian settler culture in the nineteen...
How do you support people forever attached to a landscape after an inferno tears through their homel...
In his landmark book The Biggest Estate on Earth, historian Bill Gammage argues that before the arri...
Recent catastrophic fires in Australia and North America have raised broad-scale questions about how...
Australia is a fire-prone continent, and its long-term history of burning is the product of millenni...
Protecting “wilderness” and removing human involvement in “nature” was a core pillar of the modern c...
Protecting “wilderness” and removing human involvement in “nature” was a cor...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
Colonialism has disrupted Indigenous socioecological systems around the globe, including those suppo...
This video brief and article complements the on-going Indigenous Peoples Climate Change Assessment. ...
[EN] The acquisition of fire is one of the key aspects of the process of hominization that made poss...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
Through a close reading of particular episodes and a focus on the minutiae of action and context, th...
This article explores the significance of the campfire to Australian settler culture in the nineteen...
How do you support people forever attached to a landscape after an inferno tears through their homel...
In his landmark book The Biggest Estate on Earth, historian Bill Gammage argues that before the arri...
Recent catastrophic fires in Australia and North America have raised broad-scale questions about how...
Australia is a fire-prone continent, and its long-term history of burning is the product of millenni...
Protecting “wilderness” and removing human involvement in “nature” was a core pillar of the modern c...
Protecting “wilderness” and removing human involvement in “nature” was a cor...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
Colonialism has disrupted Indigenous socioecological systems around the globe, including those suppo...
This video brief and article complements the on-going Indigenous Peoples Climate Change Assessment. ...
[EN] The acquisition of fire is one of the key aspects of the process of hominization that made poss...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
The catastrophic 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires were the worst fire season in the recorded history...
Through a close reading of particular episodes and a focus on the minutiae of action and context, th...
This article explores the significance of the campfire to Australian settler culture in the nineteen...
How do you support people forever attached to a landscape after an inferno tears through their homel...