A commentary on the 1st Auckland Triennial, the chapter engages with the work of artists John Lyall, Mariele Neudecker, Michael Parekowhai and Bill Hammond in order to explore the biological and cultural dimensions of inhabiting an island. It links together processes of biological species introduction (and bio-invasion) with cultural transmission, suggesting that there are similar dynamics at work in the biological and cultural realms. As a site of `infectious rhythms' of invasion, catastrophe and creativity, the material experience of island life, it is suggested, is far from that of the tranquillity and timelessness often imagined by distant metropolitan centres
Some of today's most pressing issues deal with invasions by alien species into natural or man-made e...
National identity in many post-colonial states is predicated on nature being outside and antecedent ...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
For a long time, islands have served as the focal point for the studies of numerous researchers, who...
This paper examines the establishment of New Zealand\u27s tourism industry and the ways that it incr...
Islands have always attracted considerable research effort due to their unique geography and biota. ...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
Spearheaded by Beck and the ‘world risk society’ thesis, contemporary commentators in search of evid...
The lateness and prominence of Polynesian colonisation of New Zealand make it an ideal place to inve...
A Fruitful new area of environmental history research can be undertaken on the relationship between ...
This thesis examines the fictional island and assesses the impact of Darwinism on the genre. I show ...
The ease of travel by jet aircraft has opened up island areas not only for study but also for introd...
The human dimensions of biological invasions have recently become the subject of serious study. Curr...
This world is one of islands – forty-three island nation-states, many hundreds of island jurisdicti...
This paper conducts an exploration of the post-Darwinian literary and philosophical imaginary throug...
Some of today's most pressing issues deal with invasions by alien species into natural or man-made e...
National identity in many post-colonial states is predicated on nature being outside and antecedent ...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
For a long time, islands have served as the focal point for the studies of numerous researchers, who...
This paper examines the establishment of New Zealand\u27s tourism industry and the ways that it incr...
Islands have always attracted considerable research effort due to their unique geography and biota. ...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
Spearheaded by Beck and the ‘world risk society’ thesis, contemporary commentators in search of evid...
The lateness and prominence of Polynesian colonisation of New Zealand make it an ideal place to inve...
A Fruitful new area of environmental history research can be undertaken on the relationship between ...
This thesis examines the fictional island and assesses the impact of Darwinism on the genre. I show ...
The ease of travel by jet aircraft has opened up island areas not only for study but also for introd...
The human dimensions of biological invasions have recently become the subject of serious study. Curr...
This world is one of islands – forty-three island nation-states, many hundreds of island jurisdicti...
This paper conducts an exploration of the post-Darwinian literary and philosophical imaginary throug...
Some of today's most pressing issues deal with invasions by alien species into natural or man-made e...
National identity in many post-colonial states is predicated on nature being outside and antecedent ...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...