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Thank you for choosing to submit your textbook to ANU Press. These works are published under the imprint ANU Press Textbooks. Below you will find all the necessary information for publishing your work with ANU Press, from submitting a textbook proposal to marketing and promoting your published work

Anthropology in Pacific and Asian Studies »

The Monographs in Anthropology series offers an opportunity to publish innovative works of theory and ethnography from the Asia-Pacific region. To date, our titles have included studies on such topics as self-determination, mobility, temporality, ritual performance, music, connections to land,

Brad Underhill »

Brad Underhill lectures at Deakin University. He is a past recipient of the Hank Nelson Memorial Award for best PhD internationally on any aspect of Papua New Guinea’s history, a Deakin University Vice-Chancellor’s Prize for academic excellence, and the Bowater Trust medal for best all-round undergraduate student at Deakin University. He has published widely on Papua New Guinea.

Mary Eagle »

Mary Eagle is the author of a number of books about Australian art. Born in 1944, her BA degree was in History as well as Fine Arts and her PhD thesis was a history based on situations represented visually both by Indigenous Australians and European-Australians. Greg Dening’s ethnographic teaching at the University of Melbourne was the key for her approach to art criticism, art history, and curatorship. After eighteen years as a curator at the National Gallery of Australia, seven as the Head of Australian Art, the same influence led her to join The Australian National University’s Centre for Cross-Cultural Research and Humanities Research Centre.

Dylan Gaffney »

Dylan Gaffney is Associate Professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology in the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford. He is also a Fellow at Hertford College, Lecturer at St Hugh’s College, and Honorary Lecturer in the Archaeology Programme at the University of Otago.

Peter Woodley »

Peter Woodley was born in Dubbo and studied economics and history at The Australian National University (ANU) before a career in government, mainly working in health care policy. He returned to the ANU to complete his PhD in the School of History. He has taught there and at the University of New England, and now works in the ANU National Centre of Biography.

Mitchell Browne »

Mitchell Browne is a linguist primarily working on the description and documentation of Warlmanpa and Warumungu, in collaboration with community members in Tennant Creek. He is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Macquarie University and Adjunct Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia.

James J. Fox »

James J. Fox is Emeritus Professor at The Australian National University where he has been based since 1975. He was Director of the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies until his retirement in 2006. Professor Fox has been studying oral composition in parallelism since his first fieldwork on the Island of Rote in 1965–66. Stimulated by Professor Roman Jakobson, whom he met at Harvard University, he has done considerable comparative research on semantic parallelism and continues to work with master poets from the Timor area.

John Kinder »

John Kinder is Emeritus Professor of Italian at the University of Western Australia. From early research on the Italian language and dialects in migrant communities in Australia and New Zealand, he published on a wide range of topics in language teaching and learning, the external history of Italian and, most recently, the presence of Italians and Italian in colonial Australia. In retirement, he plans to learn at least two new languages.

Nicola Fraschini »

Nicola Fraschini is a senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne Asia Institute, where he is the coordinator of the Korean Studies programme. Previously he worked at Sogang University (Seoul) and at the University of Western Australia (Perth). He is co-author of Mission Accomplished: Korean 1 & 2 (2023) and co-editor of Advancing Language Research through Q Methodology (2024).