Posted under Digital Humanities MULT90056

  1. ‘Winja Ulupna’: Public Health Posters as Visual Culture

    Ainslee Meredith Winja Ulupna is an Aboriginal women’s residential drug and alcohol recovery house based in St Kilda. Established in 1976 through Australian Government investment in …

    blogs.unimelb.edu.au/librarycollections/2017/10/15/winja-ulupna-public-health-posters-as-visual-culture

  2. ‘Picturing Black Australia’

    Jimmy Yan  The 1988 Australian bicentenary was marked by its contradictory history and dual claims for national attention. There was the assertion of settler-colonial nationalism and, …

    blogs.unimelb.edu.au/librarycollections/2017/10/15/picturing-black-australia

  3. ‘I saw it on the television’: An early call for diversity in the media

    Victoria Perin ‘Capital A Art as it is conventionally understood is at best only a minor contributor to the development of cultural values, about as important …

    blogs.unimelb.edu.au/librarycollections/2017/10/15/i-saw-it-on-the-television-an-early-call-for-diversity-in-the-media

  4. ‘White Australia has a Black History’ NAIDOC week poster, 1987

    Eliza O’Donnell Mandandanji descendant and Queensland based multidisciplinary artist, Laurie Nilsen (1953) designed the poster ‘White Australia has a Black History’ for the National Aboriginal and …

    blogs.unimelb.edu.au/librarycollections/2017/10/15/white-australia-has-a-black-history-naidoc-week-poster-1987

  5. ‘Koorie Boogaja’ 1971

    Beth Marsden ‘This is our land and we are proud of it. After all, you white fellows weren’t the first to discover Australia—we were here first.’ Charlie Carter[1] …

    blogs.unimelb.edu.au/librarycollections/2017/10/15/koorie-boogaja-1971

Number of posts found: 64