Spotlight on Active Projects


06 December, by lisa.

Juanita Ruys

Many a hero who has fallen from grace has used the phrase ‘the demons made me do it’ to redeem themselves.

CHE Chief Investigator, Dr Juanita Ruys presented her research on the history of demonic emotions on Wednesday, 19 October at a cocktail evening organized by the University of Sydney Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences’ in the City alumni initiative.

“My talk gave an overview of the history of demonic emotions, from the fall of the rebellious angels from Heaven, to their temptation of desert saints in the form of lascivious women and dancing girls, to their sexual miscegenation with women in the Middle Ages,” Dr Ruys said.

“I showed that although the Enlightenment brought a new sense of humanity as ruled by reason, the question of how much emotions influence our thoughts and behaviour continues to surface, with current work by sociologists, psychologists and neuroscientists leading the way,” she said.

Dr Ruys noted that the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions is committed to exploring this question from the point of view of the life experiences and written records of our European ancestors in the medieval and early modern periods.
 
“The discussions I was having with people was around political demons... We then looked at the greater society and what motivates people to be destructive in nature and we asked the question: did we all have a demon within us? Some people reflected that it is the demons within us all that cause us to be self- destructive and then as a community to be destructive. In the end it came down to questions of how we prevent this as a human race to improve the world?
" she reminisced.

Source: Erika von Kaschke, Editor, History of Emotions e-newsletter

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19 October, by lisa.

Source: Antarctic Arts Fellowship

Jesse Blackadder

14th October 2011

Environment Minister Tony Burke today announced Australian writer and academic Jesse Blackadder had received the 2011 Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship.

The Gillard Government each year awards Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowships to enable those with a non-science focus to experience Antarctica first-hand so that they may communicate this unique experience and understanding to other Australians.

Mr Burke said Ms Blackadder would use the Fellowship to work on several projects but in particular to research an historic novel about Ingrid Christensen, the first woman to see Antarctica. The novel is part of Ms Blackadder’s Doctor of Creative Arts project at the University of Western Sydney.

“Our opportunity to understand the precious and unique Antarctic landscape should not only be through the eyes of scientists. That’s why the Gillard Government runs the Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship program,” Mr Burke said.

“The writing of Antarctic history has been about the heroic efforts of men who explored the continent.

“As we celebrate the centenary of expeditions by our famous male Antarctic explorers such as Australia’s Sir Douglas Mawson it is perhaps surprising for many of us to discover the virtually invisible role of women in our early Antarctic history.

“Women such as Norway’s Ingrid Christensen, who is the subject of Ms Blackadder’s proposed novel, travelled south with their husbands on whaling ships.

“Ingrid Christensen accompanied her husband Lars on four Antarctic whaling ships in the 1930s but while the first woman to ‘see’ Antarctica, Ingrid Christensen was beaten to her goal to be the first woman to land on the continent by a woman from another whaling ship, Caroline Mikkelsen.”

Jesse Blackadder, from Myocum, in New South Wales, will travel to Antarctica on the Australian Antarctic Division icebreaker Aurora Australis, leaving Hobart on 23 October. She will visit Australia’s Davis station before returning in early December.

Her novel will give glimpses into the life of a woman on an Antarctic whaling ship in the 1930s. It will also tell the story of how exploitative whaling devastated populations in the Southern Ocean.

Ms Blackadder, who writes extensively across a range of media, will also share the experiences of her Antarctic trip through digital story telling on social media; magazine articles and as a subject for her academic project, presentations and lectures. Ms Blackadder has been writing fiction for 20 years specialising in environment, landcare and sustainability. Her works include After the Party, and The Raven’s Heart.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the departure in 1911 of the first Australasian Antarctic Expedition led by Sir Douglas Mawson, who established Australia's first base for scientific and geographical discovery at Cape Denison in Antarctica.

Further information on the Antarctic Arts Fellowship.

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19 September, by lisa.

Source: 9News online, Monday September 19, 2011

An archaeological dig will start next weekend at the site where Australia's first saint, Mary MacKillop, established her first school in South Australia's southeast.

About 15 staff and students from Flinders University will take part in the week-long dig at the Penola stable, hoping to find artefacts relating to Saint Mary of the Cross.

Associate professor Heather Burke says the dig is an exciting project that provides a valuable opportunity to showcase the university'sexpertise in archaeology and a rare chance to possibly reveal some important parts of Australia's history.

SA Tourism provided funds to help kick start the project. General manager Nick Jones says it is hoped the dig will also confirm the precise location of the stable.

"Mary MacKillop's story is of great appeal to people of all walks of life," he said.

"If the stable's location is verified and the site developed, the project has the potential to become a significant tourism asset for the Limestone Coast."


© AAP 2011

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19 July, by lisa.

A/Prof. Karen Orr Vered (Screen & Media, Flinders University), Ms Tully Barnett (PhD candidate, English, Flinders University) and Ms Ksenia Filatov (Hons candidate, Education, Flinders University) in collaboration with Willunga Primary School have been awarded a Knowledge Exchange Grant to develop strategies and activities that will link classrooms with community via the National Broadband Network.
This grant aims to add value to the state government’s Baseline Study and Thinker in Residence Report (Bell, 2010). They will approach NBN implementation with a three-pronged project designed to meet needs identified within the schooling community: assessing attitudes towards the NBN among teachers, parents and students; supporting teachers with staff development; and, developing learning activities with and for broadband.
Ms Alison Colbeck, Deputy Principal and ICT Coordinator for Willunga Primary will lead the project on the school's behalf.
Article from Rebecca Vaughan, Research Development Officer, Flinders Institute for Research in the Humanities

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