Welcome to our fortnightly newsletter. If you have things you’d like to share with the CCH community, please email Anna before the next fortnightly newsletter. We will also share news and updates on Facebook and LinkedIn.
News from Members and Associates
Congratulations to Liam Detering who recently submitted his PhD thesis for examination!
Congratulations to Joan Beaumont who has recently revised and updated the 1988 version her book Gull Force. It contains three new chapters that examine war crimes trials, war cemeteries, homecomings, pilgrimages and the place of Gull Force in national memory. You can find it here: Gull Force: Australian POWs on Ambon and Hainan, 1941–45 | NewSouth Books
Seminar Series
Our 2025 Seminar Series will kick off this week! Details for upcoming seminars are below.
– Wednesday 2nd April – Jess Parr and colleagues
– Wednesday 9th April – Caitlin Mahar
– Wednesday 16th April – Mia Martin Hobbs – This seminar has changed days as the original date was during the mid-Trimester break.
We are still looking to fill slots across the year, so if you would like to share your research with the collegiate and engaged audience that the CCH offers, please do get in touch with Anna.
Events
The History Council of Victoria Book+Author Event
1 May 2025, 6pm
Bard’s Apothecary, 7/24 Crossley St, Melbourne CBD
The History Council of Victoria’s next Book+Author event for 2025 is Dr Yves Rees joined by Dr Clare Wright, who will be discussing her latest book Näku Dhäruk, The Bark Petitions: How the People of Yirrkala Changed the Course of Australian Democracy. RSVPs are essential – check the History Council of Victoria website for details.
Book Launch: Let the Dead Speak: Spiritualism in Australia
Thursday, 8 May 2025, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Victorian Spiritualists’ Union, North Melbourne
You are warmly invited to the launch of Let the Dead Speak: Spiritualism in Australia, a new book by Andrew Singleton (Deakin University) and Matt Tomlinson (ANU), published by Manchester University Press (2025). The book will be launched by Rev. Lorraine Lee Tet (President, VSU) and A/Prof Debra McDougall (Anthropology, Uni Melb), with A/Prof Bart Ziino (Deakin) as MC. Light refreshments provided.
This is a free event, but bookings are essential for catering purposes. Click on this link to reserve your place.
Graduate Oral History Intensive
May 2025
4-day online course offered by Oral History Victoria, taught by Carla Pascoe Leahy, Sarah Rood and Alistair Thomson.
Are you a PhD, Masters or Honours student, or a post-doc, about to start a research project using oral history – and need training to get you on the right track? Perhaps you’ve already started a graduate oral history project and want advice and support? You may be a historian, or you work in another social science or humanities discipline that uses life story interviews. This four-day, online training course could be just what you need. Course fees are $500 for Oral History Victoria and Oral History Australia members and $750 for non-members. Registration and more information is available here.
CCH/APH Policy Brief Workshop for PhD/ECRs
26 May 2025
Deakin Downtown
Are you a PhD candidate or ECR interested in learning how to write a policy brief? Join us at Deakin Downtown for a whole-day workshop to learn the ropes of policy writing and translate your expert knowledge into advice for policymakers.
The workshop will include an overview and examples of what a policy brief should entail, scenarios based on your area of research, free-writing a plan/draft a policy brief, feedback from peers and CCH mentors, and a reflective session for questions and concerns. Dr Sarah Pinto and A/Prof Carolyn Holbrook will offer advice from their experience teaching and writing policy briefs, and participants will be invited to submit their policy briefs for publication in Australian Policy History.
If you are interested in joining the workshop, please RSVP to mia.martinhobbs@deakin.edu.au by 28 April with the following information:
- Main research project
- Suggestions of potential policy issues related to your research
- Any dietary requirements
Pacific History Association Conference
2 – 4 December 2025, Samoa
The 26th Pacific History Association (PHA) Conference will take place from December 2-4, 2025, at the National University of Samoa, Apia, Samoa.
The conference theme, “Le Solosolo’ū: Resilience in the Face of Adversity,” explores the historical resilience of Pacific communities in navigating challenges. We invite historians and scholars from diverse disciplines to contribute to discussions on historical narratives of resilience, cultural practices demonstrating adaptability, and innovative solutions to adversity in Pacific contexts. Through these multifaceted perspectives, we aim to deepen our understanding of how Pacific people have historically confronted and overcome various challenges, showcasing their enduring strength and adaptability. This theme provides a rich framework for examining the ways in which Pacific communities have demonstrated resilience throughout history, offering insights into their cultural practices, problem- solving approaches, and adaptive strategies in the face of adversity.
The call for papers is now open, you can find more details here. Submissions are due 31 March (today!).
CCH Research Grants and other opportunities
If you have plans for research in 2025, you can apply for a 2025 research grant now!
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.
Keep an eye out for Researcher Development Academy workshops available over coming months. For full details of workshops ranging from recruiting graduate researchers to impact to grant writing support and running mostly just 1-2 hours in length, see this RDA page.
There are also research training opportunities available through Deakin eResearch for high-performance computing, MS Excel, programming, data management, cleaning, visualisation, exploration and more. More details are here.
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
Margaret Cameron Residency
Deakin University Library is the vibrant virtual and physical heart of the University. It is home to innovative services, resources and spaces, and we are continuously striving to create new connections with the Deakin community. Drawing on the trove of rare and unique materials held in Deakin University Archives and Deakin Library’s Special Collections, the Residency aims to share the rich stories captured within these collections, which document over a century of history, research and collecting at Deakin, along with its predecessor institutions and the regions in which the University has operated. This Residency is funded by a generous bequest from the late Professor Margaret Cameron AM, Deakin’s first Chief Librarian. Expressions of interest close on the 23 April 2025. For more details see this link.
National Library of Australia Fellowships
Applications are now open for the 2026 Fellowships offered by the National Library of Australia. On offer are eight National Library of Australia Fellowships, which are open to experienced researchers needing to undertake sustained work with the Library’s collections to advance their research towards publication or other public outcomes. Research may be in any field that can be supported by the National Library’s collections, with specific Fellowships also available for those working in the areas of Asian studies, Australian literature, and Australian rural, regional or environmental history.
The Creative Arts Fellowship for Australian Writing is open to creative writers, working in any literary genre, to develop creative works inspired by the Library’s collections. This may include writing for performance, poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, personal essays or graphic novels. Learn more about the National Library of Australia Fellowships and Creative Arts Fellowship, including information on eligibility, information on previous projects and online application forms. Applications for National Library of Australia Fellowships and the Creative Arts Fellowship will close on Monday 5 May 2025.
AKF Visiting Professorship in Australian Studies
Seoul National University, 2026
Applications for the 2026 Visiting Professor of Australian Studies position at Seoul National University (SNU) are now open. Supported by Woodside Energy and developed in partnership with SNU and the Australia-Korea Foundation, the Visiting Professor position is a funded 11-month visiting academic position commencing in early 2026 at SNU which aims to support innovative research collaborations and promote mutual understanding of Australia and Korea’s history, cultural heritage, and modern outlook. The closing date for applications is 27 April 2025. For more information and a position description see this link.
CEW Bean Prize
Australian Army History Unit’s CEW Bean Prize for Military History is now open. This prize is awarded to the best Honours, Masters and PhD theses submitted in any Australian university over the last three years. This year, applications for theses submitted in 2023, 2024 and 2025 will be accepted. You can find out more information and application details here. The 2025 Prize closes on Friday 2 May 2025.
Journal of Pacific History Publication Incentive Grant
The Journal of Pacific History Inc. invites qualified persons to apply for a Publication Incentive grant. These competitive grants are offered to help support early career Pacific historians to prepare manuscripts for submission to the Journal of Pacific History for peer review. Anyone who has completed a PhD or MA since 2019 in a field relevant to Pacific history, or who is currently enrolled for a doctorate in such a field, can apply for a grant of $3,000 to prepare a manuscript for submission to peer review. Applications are due by the 30 September 2025, and more details and instructions are available in this link.
National Library Fellowships
Call for Papers – ‘Archives and Archetypes: Recovery and Renewal’
RMIT School of Media and Communication is proud to announce it is hosting the 14th Australian Media Traditions biennial conference on Thursday 4 and Friday 5 September 2025. The conference will be held in-person at RMIT University’s City Campus, 123 Swanston Street, Melbourne. There will also be a social event at the Capitol Theatre on the evening of Wednesday 3 September.
We are calling for paper and panel proposals that speak to the theme ‘Archives and Archetypes: Recovery and Renewal’. Please send paper abstracts and panel proposals to ausmediatraditions2025@gmail.com by Monday 31 March. You can find more details about the CFP and the conference here.
The Pacific History Association Teresia Teaiwa Prize 2025
The Pacific History Association (PHA) established the Teresia Teaiwa Prize in 2018 to honour the profound legacy of Teresia Teaiwa, former President and Secretary of PHA. The inaugural prize was awarded at the PHA’s 2021 conference. The 2025 winner will be decided and announced at the PHA’s biennial conference to be held on 2-5 December 2025 at the National University of Samoa. The prize is for a conference presentation. Finalists will be shortlisted on the basis of an essay submitted prior to the conference. The 2025 winner will receive a prize of $1000. You can find further information and eligibility requirements here.
Gunson Essay Prize
A prize of AUD $1,000 will be awarded at the 2025 Pacific History Association Conference, for the winner of the Gunson Essay Prize Competition. Postgraduate or senior students from any country are invited to submit an essay in English between 5,000 and 8,000 words on any topic relating to the pasts of the Island Pacific and its peoples by 1 November 2025. For further details and eligibility requirements see this link.
Laura Bassi Scholarship
The Laura Bassi Scholarship was established in 2018 with the aim of providing editorial assistance to postgraduates and junior academics whose research focuses on neglected topics of study, broadly construed. The scholarships are open to every discipline and the next round of funding will be awarded in Spring 2025. The application deadline is 31 March 2025 and results will be communicated by 11 April 2025.
All currently enrolled master’s and doctoral candidates are eligible to apply, as are academics in the first five years of full-time employment. Applicants are required to submit a completed application form along with their CV through the application portal by the relevant deadline. Further details, including previous winners, and the application portal can be found at here.
ADI Policy Briefing Paper
As you might be aware, ADI and CRIS have developed the ADI Policy Briefing Paper series which draws on the expertise of the Institute to examine important issues facing Australia today. The purpose of each paper is to inform public debate and policy discussion, and to set out practical proposals that will contribute solutions to complex issues.
The Policy Briefing Papers Series is part of ADI’s approach for engage and taking our excellent research into our communities. This will help us contribute to and influence public policy debates related to our research areas or, indeed, humanities and social science research more broadly.
There is a template for you to use. For more information please email Mark Duckworth and Ciara Barker.
PHA Early Career Researchers’ Month Webinar Series
The Pacific History Association will be holding its first “Early Career Researchers’ Month Webinar Series” in 2025. Conceived as both a platform for early career researchers whose works relate to the Pacific area and as preparation towards the association’s biennial conference, the event will take place as a series of 4 one-hour sessions held over Zoom, each one welcoming two speakers, on Thursdays 3-10-17-24 April 2025 from approx. 9 to 10 am NZST (tbc). Each speaker will have an allocated time of 15-20 minutes for their paper presentation and 10-15 minutes for questions and discussion (total 30 minutes each).
This series does not have a particular theme set, so please feel free to submit a paper proposal to the coordinators on any topic relating to the pasts of the Pacific, its islands and its peoples by 10 February 2025. Any paper proposal relating to the 2025 conference theme “Le Solosolo’ū : Resilience in the Face of Adversity” are also most welcome.
We welcome proposals from HDR students (Master’s and PhD) and recent PhD graduates in the wider humanities : history, art history, anthropology, ethnography, law, literature, philosophy, political science, international relations, as well as from contributors from the heritage and museums sectors. You can find more information here.
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
Elections at Mackay in August 1883 between the contestants Maurice Hume Black and Thomas Campbell. (State Library of Queensland)