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1 14 y separately published work icon Griffith Review Julianne Schultz (editor), 2003- Nathan : Griffith University ABC Books , Z1083691 2003- periodical (82 issues) 'Each issue will develop an important topical theme with writing from a range of genres and perspectives that will provide a unique literary conversation. Griffith Review aims to build a bridge between journalism, academic and literary writing in Australia.' (From: http://www58.gu.edu.au:4500/grifrev/index.php sighted 22/11/2003)
1 1 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue TEXT Special Issue Website Series Nigel Krauth (editor), Tess Brady , Jen Webb , 2000 Griffith University Deakin University , Z1037643 2000 periodical (63 issues)
1 form y separately published work icon An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It Lachlan Pendragon , ( dir. Lachlan Pendragon ) Brisbane : Griffith University , 2022 25741185 2022 single work film/TV A mysterious talking ostrich shows a young office worker the flaws in his stop-motion universe.
1 y separately published work icon Elemental Summer 2020 Nathan : Griffith University , 2020 20734483 2020 series - publisher essay

'Bearing witness to the climate emergency, The Elemental Summer will navigate ideas and experiences of land, fire, water and air, and the science that tracks and explores them.'

1 y separately published work icon Magical Realism and Writing Place : A Novel and Exegesis Glenda Guest , Queensland : 2005 Z1676413 2005 single work thesis
1 y separately published work icon Future Frontier : Ante Up Sally Breen , Brisbane : 2005 10313397 2005 single work thesis

'This thesis, consisting of a novel and a dissertation, examines the intersections of place, identity and fiction. During earlier studies I encountered nomadology as represented in Stephen Muecke's work on Australian Indigeneity, and also the developments on theories and practices of nomadology undertaken by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari. I began to explore the production of culture in cities read through these ideas. In the present work, my thinking and approaches have been extended significantly by Edward W. Soja's insights into lived experience, cities and spaces, and by the rhizomatics of Deleuze and Guattari. What is presented here is a hybrid text - novel and dissertation. Both explore ideas about the production of culture in cities and the exchange of external and internal processes that occurs between people and places. I wanted to articulate what I see as particular cultural processes of postmodern cities, which have developed in ways that depart from conventional understandings of what constitutes urban environments and urbanism. There are co-relations between cities that began in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the increasing global influence of American popular culture, and new millennium developments redefined by technological insurgence. We have seen the emergence of a new kind of city, one that offers accelerated, ahistorical, and dispersed spaces and experiences. My theorising of the 'new frontier city' is explicated in the dissertation, and represented in the novel through the Gold Coast. The relationship between urban formations and postmodern cultural signification is mimicked by the relationship between the two texts. While neither directly refers to the other, an association is developed whereby key characteristics of the new frontier city, such as spectacle, subterfuge, simulation and speculation, are manifested by my fictional characters, thematics and stylistic approaches. In addition, the dissertation sometimes works creatively while the novel is derivative of actual icons, people, monuments and events. The work examines the collapse of distinction between the 'real' (traditionally represented by the city and urban formations) and the hyperreal (presented by fictionality). I see and position the cities of Los Angeles, Las Vegas and the Gold Coast as texts - as new frontier cities where the language of signs, simulation and consumption permeates the cultural and urban fabric in intriguing ways. I argue for the new frontier city as a site rich in narrative potential. I critique readings that privilege Euro-centric, modernist notions of high cultural values and cosmopolitanism which continue to exclude the new frontier from 'serious' cultural status. The fascination I experience for the new frontier city is enacted through an amalgam; a methodology which is applicable to the divergent urban and cultural formations of new frontier cities and the kinds of fictions they produce. The assemblaic and nomadic approach taken in the thesis allows for the development of a relationship of association. For though I am influenced throughout by contemporary urban theorists such as Soja, Sudjic and Frost, whose variant perspectives challenge dominant discourses in their fields, the text remains deliberately unsituated. It contributes to understandings in the realm of urban policy and analysis but ultimately functions as a treatise on how the writer can merge both fictional and non-fictional perspectives to construct meaning and narrative in the seemingly random and impenetrable urban landscapes of the new frontier. The novel and dissertation are therefore parallel documents which map this process rhizomatically. I resist explicit and didactic explications in order to 'mimic' (in Deleuzian terms) the more arbitary and distillatory process of the creative writer. The opening chapters of Future Frontier explore the development history of Los Angeles, the Gold Coast and Las Vegas, concentrating on the meaning and characteristics of the new frontier city in relation to the narrative experience. Section Two concentrates on broader definitions of new frontier cities and the contrasts with European architectural and urban experience. Section Three explores the effects of cinema and cinematic mimicry on new frontier cities. This section features micro-concentrations on celebrity worship, reality TV, plastic surgery and the geography of extreme experience. Section Four focuses primarily on the Gold Coast and examines ways in which the distinctive processes of the new frontier have influenced significant subsections of its culture in the arenas of politics, development and architecture. Section Five posits a 'culture of subterfuge'. Here the associated effects of gambling, risk, speculation, crime and fraud are examined. The closing statement, Culture of Contradiction, offers a navigation through the narrative potentials of the new frontier by recognising it as a site fuelled by inherent, overlapping and divergent fictional voices. This analysis informs the stylistic technique of the novel, which features three contrasting voices and timescapes. These 'speakers' converge obsessively on the elusive character of Jade. The key storyteller is The Dealer, a croupier who attaches himself to Jade in ways which are reminiscent of classic noir but subverted by his displacement in the new frontier. His object is to reveal, to 'turn over' the present. Another aspect of Jade's character is evoked by the recollective voice of Anthony who is isolated and remains ignorant of other players in the game. The third voice is representative of the city - the omnipotent eye of the Gold Coast. Each 'version' of Jade's story overlaps the other. Because the reader never gains access to her own interior monologue Jade remains absent, in an intimate sense, while being relentlessly pursued, coveted and externally revealed. Jade, like the new frontier city, must always be read and experienced through the chimera of unreality - through the affected gaze of others - in order to be known. Jade fascinates as the new frontier city does, and she is marked by desire for impermanence.' (Source: TROVE)

1 y separately published work icon To Market, To Market : The Development of the Australian Children's Publishing Industry Robyn Sheahan-Bright , 2004 Z1306532 2004 single work thesis

This study attempts to examine the tension between commerce and culture in the dynamic development of the Australian children's publishing industry. It includes a history of the industry from its inception but concentrates on the period after World War Two, during which most of its growth occurred. It focuses on those houses which contributed to children's publishing flourishing in the post-war period, documenting the major landmarks, but also attempting to contextualise the development of children's publishing within other post-war developments. The ultimate aim of the study is to refute a commonly stated truism - that the conflict between the cultural value of a book and the need to market it threatens the integrity of the authors, publishers and the books themselves. Instead, it demonstrates that the tension between cultural and commercial definitions of the book publisher's role lie at the heart of the dynamism which creates really innovative publishing.

1 y separately published work icon Writing Revolution: The British Radical Literary Tradition as the Seminal Force in the Development of Adult Education, its Australian Context, and the Life and Work of Eric Lambert... Teri Merlyn , 2004 Z1186651 2004 single work thesis
1 2 y separately published work icon Griffith Review Addicted to Celebrity no. 5 Spring Meadowbrook Sydney : Griffith University ABC Books , 2004 Z1167258 2004 periodical issue 'Who can you believe? The media is dominated by celebrity, swamped by lies and awash with propaganda. Addicted to celebrity explores our fascination with celebrity and its corrosive influence and goes inside the world of news and spin in search of fragile truths.' (Back cover)
1 1 y separately published work icon Sun Square Moon : An Exegesis with Accompanying Novel : Neem Dreams Inez Baranay , 2002 Z1397048 2002 selected work thesis
1 y separately published work icon The Sentient Text : Posthumanist Subjectivity in the Work of Janette Turner Hospital Sue Lovell , Brisbane : 2001 Z1224965 2001 single work thesis PhD thesis for the Griffith University School of Humanities, 2001.
1 y separately published work icon Art and Citizenship - Governmental Intersections Lisanne Gibson , Brisbane : 1999 Z1307164 1999 single work thesis This thesis contributes to historical research on arts institutions in Australia and provides a base from which to think about the role of government in culture in contemporary Australia. It discusses the rationales for the conjunction of art, citizenship and government in post-World War Two Australia to the present day and offers an overview of the discursive origins of the main contemporary rationales framing art subvention.
1 y separately published work icon The Ritual Theatre of Jack Hibberd Paul McGillick , Brisbane : 1997 Z993307 1997 single work thesis
1 y separately published work icon The Polygamy of Friendship : Mary Fullerton, Mabel Singleton and Miles Franklin Sylvia Martin , Nathan : 1996 Z1524020 1996 single work thesis
1 y separately published work icon Towards a Policy for the Development of Writing and Publishing in Queensland Stuart Glover , Brisbane : 1994 Z1306603 1994 single work thesis In 1991, the Queensland Government accepted and implemented a new framework for funding and developing the Arts. The Queensland: A State for the Arts Report makes specific recommendations about developing writing and publishing in the State. This thesis critiques the setting and achievement of the original recommendations. It argues for a long-term development plan for the future development of writing to address the primitive level of development in the Queensland sector and the uncoordinated interventions of the three levels of government to support the development of writing and publishing.
1 y separately published work icon Dialogical Criticism : Reframing the Problem of Interpreting Australian Cultural and Literary Models Cameron Richards , Brisbane : 1994 10045223 1994 single work thesis
1 y separately published work icon Syncing Out Loud : A Journey into Illness Jim Mienczakowski , 1992 Nathan : Griffith University , 1992 Z1874937 1992 single work drama
1 y separately published work icon Busting : The Challenge of the Drought Spirit Jim Mienczakowski , Stephen Morgan , 1990 Nathan : Griffith University , 1990 Z1874947 1990 single work drama
1 y separately published work icon Holes in the Traffic : a novel Robert Morris , Nathan : Griffith University , 1978 Z1247450 1978 single work novel
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