Books published by Australian Scholarly Publishin
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More Than a Footnote recounts the history and development of organ transplantation in Australia and New Zealand. Comprising first hand accounts from surgeons, physicians, scientists and transplant coordinators all key participants in this story the book details a half-century ...
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A tireless advocate on behalf of Aboriginal people, Charles Duguid was true to his name. He founded the Ernabella Mission in 1937, a mission widely regarded as one of the most culturally sensitive ever established. In the post-war period, he sought ways to help Aboriginal people ...
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In 1959, when Michael O'Connor was just 20 years old, he was given responsibility for most aspects of the lives of 30,000 Papua New Guineans in the Nuku district of the Upper Sepik. For decades, Australia sent some of its brightest young men to the colony as patrol officers.
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Tom Bass decided to follow the unconventional path in the second half of the 20th Century, to make sculpture which has meaning for people and communities, when most of his contemporaries choose to make sculpture which was self expressive and determined by a growing gallery system ...
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Against a 'backdrop which ranges from London to Hobart, from the imperial metropolis to the colonial frontier, from the empire's hub to its rim', Craig Joel tells how a civil servant came to usurp the Governor's authority in his desire to curry favour with British ministers, prof ...
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Including personal anecdotes of political and literary figures, with many of whom Quinn became good friends, The Years that the Locust hath Eaten is an historical document which provides a snapshot of the literary and political world of Sydney at the time of Federation and the fi ...
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One late spring morning, Uma awakens to a life in which her relationships to lover, to husband, to son seem unbearably tangled. In capturing its seering and intimate moments, the story transcends into a mediation on love and betrayal, grief and redemption.
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Mavis Thorpe Clark was a woman ahead of her time. Her first book was published in 1930 when she was just 18, at a time when women writers were rare - yet she went on to release more than 30 works of fiction, non-fiction and biography over 60 years, and was a significant player in ...
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The Burning Mirror critically examines the dazzling impact of light's much-neglected ambivalences on photographic histories, theories and practices.
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The publication of this catalogue is timely as interest in the field of book arts, both locally and internationally continues to grow.
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