If you have any information to share in the Newsletter please send it through to Anna, the newsletter will be published every fortnight on Monday. You can read all our news here, but don’t forget we regularly put out information by our social media channels including Facebook.
Seminar Series
20th March
Dr Ian Warren
Hear about Ian’s current project with colleagues in criminology and communication studies examining the definitions of communication in current Australian law.
27th March
Dr Jillian Beard & Dr Justine Greenwood
DFAT Historians Jillian and Justine will join us to talk about Documents on Australian Foreign Policy, and how they have ended up as DFAT historians.
After a break on the 3rd April, we will return with a Grant Explainer seminar on 10th April.
APH News
On the APH website this week we have:
- A Q&A with Graeme Davison, author of My Grandfather’s Clock: Four Centuries of a British–Australian Family.
- Tim Rowse reviews Tom Chodor and Shahar Hameiri’s The Locked-Up Country
The Australian Policy and History Network is currently seeking EOIs for book reviewers. APH invites reviewers from all career stages and welcomes EOIs from HDRs who may be new to book review writing and the editorial process. EOIs, which contain a brief summary of interests or a specific book to be reviewed, can be emailed to APH’s books editor Lyndon Megarrity: drlyndon@bigpond.net.au
Events
Graduate Oral History Intensive
4-day online course
April to May 2024 (Online)
In Autumn 2024, three of Australia’s leading oral historians, in partnership with Oral History Victoria, are pioneering an oral history intensive course aimed at university research students. We will teach you how to plan an oral history project and apply for ethics approval. You’ll learn how to create excellent interviews and document the recordings for use in research. We’ll explore approaches to analysing interviews and interpreting memories. And we’ll consider how to write a thesis using oral history as well as other types of oral history productions.
You will be active participants in the teaching and learning: reading a selection of key texts, bringing examples and issues from you own research, workshopping issues with the group, conducting practice interviews, discussing interview extracts from each participant, and developing a peer support group of graduate oral history researchers from around Australia, New Zealand and South-East Asia. Each day school will be taught online via Zoom, from 9.30am to 4pm Australian Eastern Standard time. The course will be limited to 18 participants. Tickets are available here. Those without access to university funding for this event may be able to access a bursary – see the website for details.
Making Public Histories: Australia’s Housing Crisis
5pm, Thursday 21 March
Webinar
In the last few years the urgency of the debate about housing in Australia has escalated. Use of the term ‘housing crisis’ is now widespread. But what form does this crisis take? Is it a ‘crisis of affordability’ for first home buyers, a so-called ‘crisis of the middle class’, or have rising rents and high occupancy ratios made access to any form of housing even more precarious for low-income Australians? How do age and gender shape the way the effects of ‘housing crisis’ are experienced? And what role does Australia’s long commitment to the concept of a ‘home of our own’ play, both in defining the crisis and proposing solutions? In this seminar three eminent scholars consider the housing crisis, in the context of both past and present, and reflect on the implications for Australia’s future in the longer term. More details and registrations can be found here.
CCH Research Grants
Our very popular CCH Grant Program is on again this year. We have changed the grant guidelines for 2024, so it is important that you read the new guidelines before you apply for a grant. Check out the guidelines and the application forms in our hub site.
CCH Shut Up and Write
every Monday, 9am-1.30pm, via Zoom.
Start the week strong with a Shut Up and Write! We will run 4 x 50 minute blocks of writing/focus, with breaks in between to chat, grab coffees, etc. All CCH colleagues welcome, especially ECRs, HDRs, and those who work remotely. Feel free to join at any time – it doesn’t matter if you can’t make it to every session, or every block in a session, just come when you can.
The zoom link is here. (Meeting ID: 822 0730 8335, Password: 65182364)
If you would like a recurring invite in your calendar, or you have any trouble joining, email Mia at mia.martinhobbs@deakin.edu.au
Opportunities
Ann Curthoys Prize 2024
Applications are now OPEN for the Ann Curthoys Prize 2024. This prize is awarded for the best unpublished article-length work by an Early Career Researcher in any one or combination of the following fields in which Ann has published: Australian history; feminist history; Indigenous history; transnational/comparative/colonial history; and history and theory. The Prize is generously funded by Ann and the Australian Catholic University, the institution of the current History Australia editors. The winner will receive a cash prize, a citation in History Australia, and will be considered for publication in the journal. For any queries concerning this prize, get in touch with History Australia Editorial Assistant Karen Downing (karen.downing@anu.edu.au). More details are here.
AHA 2024 Conference Awards, Bursaries and Scholarships
Applications are now open for a range of AHA 2024 Conference awards, bursaries and scholarships, which will support a number of postgraduate students and early career researchers with the costs of conference attendance. Applications for each are due 31 March 2024.
These include the AHA Postgraduate and ECR Conference Awards, including two Ken and Amirah Inglis Conference Grants (supported by the AHA Public Fund). These awards will cover the cost of recipients’ registration to attend the AHA annual conference, and provide $1000 towards travel, accommodation and other conference attendance costs. Recipients will also receive mentoring from experienced historians and participation in a workshop prior to the conference to assist with turning their conference paper into a submissible journal article or book chapter.
The Jill Roe Early Career Researcher AHA Conference Scholarship Scheme will support two ECRs to attend and present at the AHA annual conference. The scholarship, valued at $1000 per applicant, provides financial assistance to facilitate participation in the AHA annual conference. The money is to be used towards assisting with registration costs, travel and accommodation.
The Patrick Wolfe Early Career Researcher Conference Bursary is awarded annually to assist two early career researchers participate in the AHA annual conference and attend the conference dinner. The conference registration fee will be waived for the successful applicants. Attendance at the conference dinner will also be covered.
You can find details about all of these awards at the AHA website.
AHA Lifetime Achievement Awards 2024
Each year the Australian Historical Association will honour one or more eminent practitioners of history with a Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of a career that has made a significant, positive contribution to the field of history in Australia. The winner(s) of the Lifetime Achievement Award will be announced at the annual AHA conference and will receive a citation in History Australia. Members of the AHA may suggest a person for the Lifetime Achievement Award by submitting a short statement (around 300 words) to the Administrative Officer explaining how their nominee has met the criteria of excellence in history and generosity in service. AHA Vice-President Michelle Arrow will be happy to respond to queries about this award. Nominations are due Friday 22 March 2024.
AHA HDR-ECR Mentoring Scheme 2024
The AHA’s HDR/ECR Mentoring Scheme pairs postgraduates and early career researchers in a mentor/mentee relationship, creating space for HDRs to ask questions and get advice from somebody who has successfully completed their doctoral study in this recent, challenging environment, and for ECRs to offer advice about how they navigate the various elements of academic life. It will also allow Early Career Researchers to develop their mentoring skills to, among other things, start preparing for future supervision responsibilities, and to forge stronger links with the HDR community. Applications for both mentors and mentees are now OPEN. The mentoring scheme runs from March to November. Call for participants closes 26 February 2024. More details are here.
2025 National Library Fellowships
Applications are now open for the 2025 Fellowships offered by the National Library of Australia. The National Library of Australia Fellowships program offers researchers an opportunity to undertake a 12-week residency at the Library. Applicants may work in any field or discipline where the Library’s collections have appropriate depth and breadth to support the desired outcomes. There are several new Fellowships available this year, including a Fellowship in Asian Studies and a Fellowship in Australian rural, regional or environmental history.
You can find out more information about the Fellowships here. Applications will close on 5th May.
Deakin Media Training
Deakin’s popular media training program is kicking off its 2024 calendar with a range of workshops from March to June, where staff and HDR students with all levels of experience can learn more about how media engagement works, and how to ace a media interview.
Included in the program this year is:
- Introductory media training – a one-hour webinar where you can learn more about what media engagement is, how it works at Deakin and the potential benefits.
- Broadcast interview workshops – in-person sessions at Burwood and Waurn Ponds where you can build media interview skills and have hands-on practice in a real studio.
- The Conversation Editor talks – a one-hour webinar with an editor from The Conversation, where you can learn more about writing for this high impact media outlet.
Each session is hosted by a member of Deakin’s experienced media team, with a special guest Deakin academic to share their own experience of media engagement and lessons learned along the way. This training is available to HDR students. More details (Deakin Login required) are here.
Axon: Creative Explorations
Creative Writing, Place and History (Dec–Jan 2024-25 issue)
This issue of the Axon: Creative Explorations journal will explore the relationships and connections between Creative Writing, Place and History and will be published in the December–January 2024-25 issue.
The editors, Paul Hetherington and Cassandra Atherton, now invite 150-word abstracts for proposed articles related to the relationships and connections between Creative Writing, Place and History, which might include topics such as:
- Poetry and place
- Poetry and history
- Genius Loci as a concept
- Creative writing and the factual
- Writing about ‘what actually happened’
- Recreating histories
- The relationship between truth, facts and invention
- Visiting writing locations
- Understanding the ‘other’ in other places
- The creative use of documentary resources
- Biography and creativity
Abstracts for articles on other related topics are also welcome.
All abstracts should be submitted by 30 April 2024 at Axon’s Submissions Manager. You can find more information here – CFP_Creative Writing Place and History_Axon Journal.
Australia-Korea Foundation Visiting Professor of Australian Studies 2024-25
The Australia-Korea Foundation Visiting Professor of Australian Studies 2024-25 is intended to enhance Australian-Korean relationships via a funded, 10-12 month visiting position at Seoul National University. You can find more information about the position here.
The International Australian Studies Association will be running the Australian part of the application and interview process: please direct any queries about the process to Prof. Anna Johnston, copying her assistant Josh Szymanski. The closing date is 15 April 2024.
CCH Hub Site
We now have a Sharepoint site (for Deakin staff and students only). This is where you can find CCH templates and logos, and importantly – new grant application forms. CCH members should have access, but you will need to use your Deakin login.
Cover Photo
Labour Day celebrations in Broken Hill, 1920