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  • Close to Home: Colonial Violence and Family Histories || Newcastle Writers Festival 2025 x HCNSW
    2025/05/04

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    Now, more than ever before, we seem more willing to acknowledge difficult histories in our family trees. At the same time, historians are increasingly writing about colonial violence and challenging long-held myths.

    What impact is this having on how we see Australia’s past, as well as our own?

    John Maynard, Mark Dunn, Stephen Gapps, and Kate Grenville speak with Julie McIntyre about their experiences of encountering dark moments in their research and how they've dealt with them in their work.


    The History Council of New South Wales is supported by the NSW Government via a grant from Create NSW.

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    Music credit: 'Only Ashes Remain' by Blackout Memories (Epidemic Sound), licensed through Canva.

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    1 時間 2 分
  • 2024 HCNSW Annual History Lecture ft. Prof. Frank Bongiorno - Making Their Political Mark
    2025/01/16

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    The 2024 History Council of New South Wales Annual History Lecture was given by Professor Frank Bongiorno, professor of history at Australian National University. First held in 1996, the Annual History Lecture was inaugurated by the HCNSW to underline the importance of history to current issues and concerns. The lectures are original works that constitute a significant contribution to historical knowledge.

    The title of the 2024 lecture is
    Making Their Political Mark:
    How have Australians remembered politics?

    2024’s Annual History Lecture was held at the Chau Chak Wing Museum, Sydney University on the 10th of September. It was recorded by Zoom, with post production by the HCNSW team using Canva Pro.

    The photographs featured are by Tim Harris Photography. https://twhphotography.com.au/

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    HCNSW Cultural Partners:
    City of Sydney
    Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts
    Museums of History NSW
    National Archives of Australia
    Placemaking NSW
    Reserve Bank of Australia
    State Library of New South Wales
    University of New England
    University of Newcastle, School of HCISS
    University of New South Wales, School of History & Philosophy
    University of Technology Sydney, Australian Centre for Public History

    The History Council of NSW is supported by the NSW Government through Create NSW.

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    50 分
  • 5 Years on from COVID-19: lessons from past health crises and the future of global health
    2024/11/25

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    5 Years on from COVID-19: lessons from past health crises and the future of global health

    Join an engaging discussion with our distinguished panel of public health and virology experts, who explore enduring infectious diseases like HIV, tuberculosis, and mpox, five years after the discovery of COVID-19. This episode highlights how pandemics have historically reshaped our world and demonstrates the transformative impact of cross-disciplinary collaboration in addressing global health challenges. The panelists confront the stigma and misinformation surrounding mpox, HIV and Covid-19, advocating for empathy and transparent communication to build trust. They dissect the role of public values in shaping policy decisions and reveal how political rhetoric affects scientific communities during health crises. Tackling the persistent threat of diseases like tuberculosis and the growing danger of antimicrobial resistance, the discussion underscores the global inequities laid bare by COVID-19 and outlines a vision for improving responses to future health emergencies.

    Many thanks to our panel:

    • Edward Holmes, Professor of Virology, University of Sydney, and NHMRC Leadership Fellow
    • Claire Hooker, Associate Professor in Health and Medical Humanities, University of Sydney, and President of the Arts Health Network NSW/ACT
    • Julie Leask, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney, and Visiting Professorial Fellow, National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance
    • Brent Mackie, Director Policy, Strategy and Research at ACON
    • Bernadette Saunders, Associate Professor in Life Sciences (Cellular Immonology) and Tuberculosis & Respiratory Diseases Group Head, University of Technology Sydney
    • Susana Vaz Nery, Professor at Kirby Institute UNSW, and Neglected Tropical Diseases research group lead
    • Jane Williams, Research Fellow (public health ethics), University of Wollongong
    • Facilitated by Philippa Nicole Barr, ANU and Western Sydney University



    This History Council of NSW event is supported by the Australia New Zealand Society for the History of Medicine (NSW) and the Australian Health and Medical Humanities Network. Our event venue partner is the Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts (SMSA).

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    1 時間 38 分
  • History Now: Truth-Telling and Histories of Genocide Now
    2024/11/11

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    Lorena Allam, Dirk Moses and Ümit Kurt reflect on what can be learned from histories of genocide, and locate their discussion between journalism, history and processes of truth-telling.

    This History Now session, chaired by Associate Professor Nancy Cushing, is a compelling exploration of truth-telling and genocide, featuring insights from award-winning journalist Lorena Allam, and renowned genocide scholars Dr Umut Kurt and Professor Dirk Moses. What responsibilities do historians have in addressing the harsh realities of genocide and colonisation, and how does this impact First Nations people in Australia and other global communities? We tackle these challenging questions and more, examining the interconnectedness of past atrocities with current conflicts, such as the ongoing violence in Palestine, through diverse perspectives.

    Lorena Allam is a multiple Walkley award winning journalist, descended from the Gamilaraay and Yawalaraay nations of north west NSW . Lorena is the Guardian's Indigenous affairs editor.

    She was awarded a 2023 Churchill fellow to investigate the role of the media in Indigenous truth telling.


    Professor Dirk Moses teaches international relations at the City College of New York. He is the author and editor of books on genocide and memory. Two anthologies appearing this year are The Holocaust Museum and Human Rights: Transnational Perspectives on Contemporary Memorials (University of Pennsylvania Press) and The Russian Invasion of Ukraine Victims Perpetrators Justice and the Question of Genocide (Routledge). He edits the Journal of Genocide Research.


    Dr. Ümit Kurt is an historian and award-winning researcher at the University of Newcastle, digging into hidden stories to better understand the transformations of imperial structures in the Modern Middle East and late Ottoman Empire – and their role in constituting the republican regime. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, he is the author of The Armenians of Aintab: The Economics of Genocide in an Ottoman Province (Harvard University Press) and coauthor of The Spirit of the Laws: The Plunder of Wealth in the Armenian Genocide (Berghahn).

    Chair: Associate Professor Nancy Cushing
    Nancy Cushing is Associate Professor in History, Director of the Centre for the Study of Violence and Deputy President of Academic Senate (Research) at the University of Newcastle on Awabakal and Worimi country. An environmental historian whose interests range from coal mining to human-other animal relations, she is co-editor of Animals Count: How Population Size Matters in Animal-Human Relations (Routledge 2018) and author of A History of Crime in Australia: Australian Underworlds. Current projects are a New History of Australia in 15 Animals (for Bloomsbury) and a history of humans and other animals in the urban area of Sydney, Australia funded by the Coral Thomas Fellowship (2024 - 25) at the State Library of New South Wales. Nancy is on the executives of the Australian Aotearoa NZ Environmental History Network and the Australian Historical Association and on the NSW Working Party for the Australian Dictionary of Biography.

    This session of History Now was produced as an online special event, by the History Council of NSW in partnership with the Centre for the Study of Violence, University of Newcastle.

    History Now 2024
    is programmed by Dr Jesse Adams Stein (Vice President of HCNSW / Member of ACPH).

    Recorded on 31 July 2024.

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    1 時間 29 分
  • History Now: The Ethics of True Crime Histories
    2024/11/07

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    Can crime narratives truly be told without causing harm or voyeurism? Join us for a compelling discussion as we bring together the insights of Dr. Meg Foster and Dr. Rachel Franks, led by chair, Nerida Campbell. With their extensive expertise in crime-related history and collections, we navigate the ethical tightrope historians must walk when recounting crime stories. Learn how these experts balance the need for intellectual integrity with the empathy and respect owed to those whose stories they tell. What does the selective heroism historically granted to figures like Ned Kelly, and not to Sam Poo ('Australia's Only Chinese Bushranger') tell us about Australian crime history?

    What are the ethical implications of the ubiquitous presence of crime in media? And what about the implications of histories that exclude crime? There's much to learn and to think with in crime history, as Meg, Rachel and Nerida will explore.

    Nerida Campbell is a curator with over 20 years experience working in collections, sites and stories related to crime, policing and the courts. She has a particular interest in the historical experience of female criminals within the New South Wales justice system. Campbell is currently working with the Harbour Trust on a series of interpretation projects for Cockatoo Island, which, as we know, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that has a complex past that includes convict, juvenile justice and prison histories.

    Meg Foster is a historian of banditry, settler colonial, and public history. She is a Chancellor's Research Fellow at the University of Technology in Sydney and was recently an ABC Top 5 Media resident for the humanities and previously a Junior Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge. Meg has a passion for connecting academia with the contemporary world and has appeared in diverse outlets such as ABC, BBC and SBS, as well as Mianjin, Overland and the Australian Book Review. Her latest book, published by New South, is Boundary Crossers: the Hidden History of Australia's Other Bush Rangers.

    Rachel Franks is the coordinator of scholarship at the State Library of New South Wales. She holds PhDs in Australian crime fiction and in true crime texts. A qualified educator and librarian, her extensive work on crime fiction, true crime, popular culture and information science has been presented at numerous conferences, as well as on radio and television. An award-winning writer, her research can be found in a wide variety of books, journals, magazines and online resources. She is the author of An Uncommon Hangman: the Life and Deaths of Robert Nosey Bob Howard, published in 2022.

    History Now seminars explore current and compelling issues affecting the practice of contemporary history. It is a long-running series of public talks and discussions, bringing new perspectives to all aspects of historical practice.

    This year History Now is a collaboration between the History Council of NSW (HCNSW), the State Library of NSW and the Australian Centre for Public History (ACPH) at UTS.

    History Now 2024 is programmed by Jesse Adams Stein (Vice President of HCNSW / Member of ACPH).

    History Now is short and sweet. The tone is conversational and the format is two speakers, each talking for 15-20 minutes, followed by a Q&A facilitated by a chairperson.



    #hcnsw #historynow #truecrimehistories #historytalks

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    53 分
  • History Now, Ep 7: More-Than-Human Histories
    2024/10/29

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    In this episode of History Now, Emily O’Gorman and Taylor Coyne reflect on how history can be understood and written from more-than-human perspectives.

    History Now seminars explore current and compelling issues affecting the practice of contemporary history. It is a long-running series of public talks and discussions, bringing new perspectives to all aspects of historical practice. This year History Now is a collaboration between the History Council of NSW (HCNSW), the State Library of NSW and the Australian Centre for Public History (ACPH) at UTS. History Now 2024 is programmed by Jesse Adams Stein (Vice President of HCNSW / Member of ACPH).

    Associate Professor Emily O’Gorman is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow based at the Department of History and Archaeology at Macquarie University, Sydney. Her research is situated within environmental history and the interdisciplinary environmental humanities, and is primarily concerned with contested knowledges within broader cultural framings of authority, expertise, and landscapes with a focus on rivers and wetlands. She is the author of Flood Country: An Environmental History of the Murray-Darling Basin (CSIRO Publishing, 2012) and Wetlands in a Dry Land: More-than-human Histories of Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin (University of Washington Press, 2021; MUP 2024).

    Taylor Coyne is a PhD Candidate in urban and historical geography at UNSW, Sydney. He is also a Project Officer in the Connection with Country design team at the Sydney-based practice Yerrabingin. Taylor works in the space of creating meaningful, community-centric, culturally inclusive water sensitive urban design through ecologically and historically contextual storytelling. Taylor’s research focus is on the history, politics and design of eastern Sydney’s urban stormwater infrastructure. In particular, asking how and why Sydney’s waterscapes came to be the way they are today, and whose knowledges and experiences have been included and excluded in the way these spaces have been designed, planned, managed, and governed. All of Taylor’s research interests are threaded together by the overarching aim to address matters that are important to marginalised communities in Sydney, with a particular focus on bringing First Nations knowledges and histories to the fore. Taylor is working towards addressing how landscape architecture and environmental history might come together to incorporate Sydney’s swampy more-than-human histories.

    Professor Warwick Anderson is the Janet Dora Hine Professor of Politics, Governance and Ethics in the Discipline of Health and leader of the Politics, Governance and Ethics Theme with the Charles Perkins Centre. From 2012-17 he was ARC Laureate Fellow in the Department of History and the Center for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine. Additionally, he has an affiliation with History and Philosophy of Science at Sydney and is a Professorial Fellow of the School of Population and Global Health at the University of Melbourne. As an historian of science, medicine and public health, focusing on Australasia, the Pacific, Southeast Asia and the United States, Anderson is especially interested in ideas about race, human difference, and citizenship in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In recent years, his research has focussed on the conceptual development of disease ecology and planetary health, i.e., the population health impacts of climate change.

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    51 分
  • History Now, Ep 6: Transnational Design Histories
    2024/10/11

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    In this episode of History Now, Livia Rezende and Isabel Rousset explore the ways in which international exchange and transcultural connections inform design and visual histories.

    History Now seminars explore current and compelling issues affecting the practice of contemporary history. It is a long-running series of public talks and discussions, bringing new perspectives to all aspects of historical practice. This year History Now is a collaboration between the History Council of NSW (HCNSW), the State Library of NSW and the Australian Centre for Public History (ACPH) at UTS. History Now 2024 is programmed by Jesse Adams Stein (Vice President of HCNSW / Member of ACPH).

    Dr Isabel Rousset is an architectural historian and a Research Fellow at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). Her research explores historical cross-sections between art, architecture, and politics. Her book The Architecture of Social Reform: Housing, Tradition and German Modernism was recently published by Manchester University Press and explores how the past was used to shape debates on housing design in modern Germany. Her current research project at UTS explores the experiences and impact of Central European migrant architects in Australia.

    Dr Livia Rezende, SFHEA, has a PhD in History of Design, is Senior Lecturer and Postgraduate Research Coordinator at UNSW Art & Design, Sydney. Her current research project examines the formation of transnational networks that led to the institutionalisation of modern design in Latin America during the Cold War. Her previous research discussed national identity formation and raw material displays in nineteenth-century International Exhibitions, Expositions Universelles and World’s Fairs. Dr Rezende’s work have been published in Design & Displacement (Routledge, 2023), Building-Object(2022), Schools of Departure (Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, 2022), and various academic journals. She serves as Book Series Editor for the Manchester University Press and Editor for the Journal of Design History.

    Dr Jesse Adams Stein is a Senior Lecturer and ARC DECRA Fellow at UTS School of Design. She is an interdisciplinary design researcher whose work explores less popular and hidden sides of design, such as industrial craft, repair, small-scale manufacturing and human labour, in both historical and contemporary contexts. Stein is the author of Hot Metal (Manchester 2016) and Industrial Craft in Australia (Palgrave 2021). With Dr Chantel Carr, Stein was founder and organiser of the interdisciplinary 2023 symposium All Hands on Deck, which led to the development of two scholarly book collections (edited with Carr), Designing through Planetary Breakdown and Working through Planetary Breakdown (both Routledge, forthcoming). Stein is deeply involved in the Australian history sector, as an oral historian, as Vice President of the History Council of NSW, and as 2024 Program Director of the history talk series, History Now.

    Recording date: 7 August 2024.

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    51 分
  • History & Memory: Oral Histories and the Science of the Dreaming, Prof. Patrick Nunn, for HCNSW First Nations Stories Series, 2024
    2024/08/02

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    This lecture is the first online offering of the 2024 First Nations Stories Series, facilitated by the History Council of New South Wales' Project Officer for First Nations' Histories. For more information about the HCNSW First Nations programs, please see our website: https://historycouncilnsw.org.au/abou...

    "History and Memory: Oral Histories and the Science of the Dreaming
    The power of recall in oral societies is phenomenal … but many scientists have only just started to understand this and think about its implications. In Australia, some of the stories that have been told longest are about ocean rise after the last ice age and the effects of volcanic eruptions, both topics which are covered in this talk.

    Geologist and climate scientist, Patrick Nunn, Professor at the University of the Sunshine Coast, has written extensively about how many ‘myths and legends’ are not fictions but culturally-filtered memories."

    Many thanks for Patrick for sharing his work and his insights. For more information about Patrick's work, see his website: https://patricknunn.org/

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    Credits:
    - Music by licence with Canva: Ecg, Blackout Memories.
    - Red dirt background by licence with Canva.
    - All images and text in lecture slides supplied by Patrick Nunn.

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    HCNSW Cultural Partners:
    City of Sydney
    Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts
    Museums of History NSW
    National Archives of Australia
    Placemaking NSW
    Reserve Bank of Australia
    State Library of New South Wales
    University of New England
    University of Newcastle, School of HCISS
    University of New South Wales, School of History & Philosophy
    University of Technology Sydney, Australian Centre for Public History

    The History Council of NSW is supported by the NSW Government through Create NSW.

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    49 分