Displaying results 2171 to 2180 of 2610.

Natalie Köhle »

Natalie Köhle is a historian of medicine, culture and the body, with a special interest in the comparative history of bodily fluids. She is working on a book about the history of humours in China and their ties to Āyurvedic and Greco-Islamic medical traditions, and on a project on the history of donkey hide gelatine. She is currently a research assistant professor in the Department of History at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Shigehisa Kuriyama »

Shigehisa Kuriyama is Reischauer Institute Professor of Cultural History at Harvard University. His recent publications include, No Pain No Gain and the History of Presence, Representations 146, no. 1 (2019): 91–111.

Terra Australis »

Terra Australis reports the results of archaeological and related research within the south and east of Asia, though mainly Australia, New Guinea and island Melanesia — lands that remained terra australis incognita to generations of prehistorians. Its subject is the settlement of the diverse

Keiko Tamura »

Keiko Tamura is an honorary researcher in the College of Asia and the Pacific at The Australian National University. She has published widely on Japanese immigrants to Australia, Western expatriate communities in Japan and memories of the Pacific War in Australia and Japan in English and Japanese. She has co-edited the other two books of David Sissons’ writings, Breaking Japanese Diplomatic Codes: David Sissons and D Special Section during the Second World War (2013) and the first volume of Bridging Australia and Japan (2016).

ANU Press in the time of Covid-19 »

James J. Fox The Australian National University Introduction Around the world, the need to access information during the COVID lockdown has enhanced the open-access movement. ANU Press is the world’s largest open-access university press: last year its publications had over 4.6 million downloads,

Laura Rademaker »

Laura Rademaker is a postdoctoral research associate at The Australian National University and author of Found in Translation: Many Meanings on a North Australian Mission (2018).

Tim Rowse »

Tim Rowse holds honorary appointments at Western Sydney University and The Australian National University. His most recent book is Indigenous and other Australians since 1901 (2017) and he is the co-editor of The Difference Identity Makes (2019).

Grazia Scotellaro »

Grazia Scotellaro is Team Leader and Senior Educator for College of Arts and Social Sciences and has a background in Technology Enhanced Language Learning. Grazia has won several awards including a College of Asia and the Pacific for Award for a Program that Enhances Student Learning in 2011 and a Vice-Chancellor Award in 2012 she was also nominated for the OLT Australian Award for University Teaching in 2012 and 2013. Currently her focus is in the support of small enrolment languages and her enthusiasm for technology and teaching and pioneer use of epubs in education is well known at ANU.

Sue O'Connor »

Sue O’Connor is a Distinguished Professor of Archaeology in the College of Asia and the Pacific at The Australian National University. She is a specialist in the archaeology of Island Southeast Asia, Australia and the Pacific, and over the past 40 years has carried out field campaigns and excavations in Indonesia, Timor-Leste, Australia and Papua New Guinea. She is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and has authored over 200 journal articles. Her co-edited books include East of Wallace’s Line: Studies of Past and Present Maritime Cultures of the Indo-Pacific Region (2000), The Archaeology of the Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia (2005) and The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current Research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period (2018).

Andrew McWilliam »

Andrew McWilliam is Professor of Anthropology in the School of Social Sciences at Western Sydney University. He is a specialist in the anthropology of Insular Southeast Asia with ethnographic interests in eastern Indonesia and Timor‑Leste as well as Northern Australia. Recent publications include Post-Conflict Social and Economic Recovery in Timor-Leste: Redemptive Legacies (2020) and a co‑edited volume, The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Timor-Leste (2019). He is editor of The Australian Journal of Anthropology (TAJA).