1,721,088 research outputs found

    Asian-Australian Relation and Identities: Alter/Asians: Asian-Australian Identities in Art, Media, and Popular Culture by Ien Ang, Sharon chalmers, Lisa Law and Mandy Thomas

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    This is a review of Alter/Asians: Asian-Australian Identities in Art, Media and Popular Culture edited by Ien Ang and, Sharon Chalmers, Lisa law and Mandy Thomas, Sydney Pluto press, 2000. This volume focuses on the understanding of Asian Australian relations and associated with this Australia's Asian identity. It covers a series of papers that explore this within the context of Australia's understanding of the Australian relationship with Asia, and the debates regarding Australian identity that were most clearly articulated in the Blainey debate and the Pauline Hanson phenomenon

    Ien Ang, Watching Dallas : Soap Opera and the Melodramatic Imagination, 1982

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    Saint-Laurent Diane. Ien Ang, Watching Dallas : Soap Opera and the Melodramatic Imagination, 1982. In: Communication. Information Médias Théories, volume 9 n°3, été 1988. pp. 126-128

    Ien Ang, On Not Speaking Chinese. Living Between Asia and the West

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    Raillon François. Ien Ang, On Not Speaking Chinese. Living Between Asia and the West. In: Archipel, volume 65, 2003. pp. 207-208

    Discordant dwellings : Australian houses and the Vietnamese diaspora

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    Interacionismo e estudos culturais: as contribuições para as teorias midiáticas das obras de Peter Hall e Ien Ang

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    As correntes teóricas contemporâneas dedicadas ao estudo da Mídia têm possibilitado novas visões sobre o tema em contraponto à clássica e predominante versão frankfurtiana da Indústria Cultural. É objetivo deste trabalho produzir um balanço interpretativo entre autores tributários de duas dessas escolas – Peter Hall e o Interacionismo, Ien Ang e os Estudos Culturais – para que, uma vez apresentados seus contrastes e semelhanças, tenham seus principais conceitos aproximados em busca de uma complementaridade que comprove sua viabilidade para novos estudos sobre a Mídia, principalmente em razão da contínua inserção desta última nas formas de sociabilidade contemporâneas.</span

    Smart engagement, stronger Australia: our future in the Asia-Pacific

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    The depth of Australia’s linguistic and inter-cultural competence will be a determining factor in the future success of developments in innovation, science and technology, research capacity, international mobility, trade relations and economic competitiveness. In the medium to longer term, the Asia Pacific region will be a principal focus, presenting major challenges and opportunities economically, socially and culturally, for our national security interests. This project aimed to address issues including, but not limited to, the following: What are the attributes (such as personal interactions, ways of learning, cultural sensitivities) needed to succeed in Asia? What skills and knowledge would make it easier for people to collaborate in science, research and business? How do we use science and cultural diplomacy to advance our broader interests in Asia Pacific? What examples stemming from science and cultural diplomacy can we learn from? How could we most successfully assist development in the Pacific region? &nbsp; Expert Working Group Professor Ien Ang FAHA (Chair) Professor Chennupati Jagadish FAA, FTSE (Deputy) Professor Kent Anderson Professor John Fitzgerald FAHA Professor Fazal Rizvi FASSA Professor Krishna Sen FAHA Professor Mark Wainwright AM, FTS

    Connecting diversity: paradoxes of multicultural Australia

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    In this report commissioned by the Special Broadcasting Service, Ien Ang, Jeff Brand, Greg Noble and Jason Sternberg analyse the views and experiences of younger Australians from culturally diverse backgrounds. They reveals a series of paradoxes in younger people’s appreciation and understanding of multiculturalism in Australia, and reveal complexities in their attitudes to diversity and media. The report includes calls to action for media organisations in better reflecting contemporary Australian society and in engaging younger people as audiences and as citizens

    Australian stereotypes and cultural identity

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    From outback heroes to Anzac legends, from Aussie battlers to noble savages - these are familiar figures in the Australian story - but is it really possible to distil identity into stereotypes? An all-women panel takes up this debate at the recent Festival of Dangerous Ideas and present a sweeping discussion on issues that concern our national psyche. This event was presented by the Sydney Opera House and the St James Ethics Centre Indonesian born Ien Ang is Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Western Sydney. Her work spans various areas of the humanities and social sciences and her books, including Watching Dallas and On Not Speaking Chinese, have been translated into many languages. Her most recent work, which she co-authored, is "The SBS Story: The Challenge of Cultural Diversity." Larissa Behrendt is Professor of Law and Director of Research at the Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning at the University of Technology in Sydney. She is a also a practising barrister who has previously worked with the United Nations. She is an author of several books on Indigenous legal issues and in 2005 she won the Commonwealth Writer\u27s Prize for her novel, "Home". She was recently named 2009 NAIDOC Person of the Year. Robyn Archer is a singer, writer, director, and public arts advocate. Known to many for her major stage success as "A Star is Torn", Robyn is also a writer, including of political songs like "Pack of Women" and "Kold Komfort Kaffee". Over the past decade she has been Artistic Director of several arts festivals. She has recently been appointed as Creative Director of the Canberra Centenary 2013. Bridget Kendall is currently the BBC\u27s diplomatic correspondent. After studying modern languages at Oxford, and then post-graduate studies in Soviet affairs, in 1983 she became a radio production trainee for the BBC World Service. Later she was the BBC\u27s Moscow correspondent and then their correspondent based in Washington. Amongst an array of world leaders she\u27s interviewed are Vladimir Putin, King Abdullah of Jordan and Mikhail Gorbachev

    TV is geen kunst

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    Recensie van: Ien Ang: Het geval Dallas. Populaire kultuur, ideologie en plezier. Amsterdam, SUA, 1982.Recensie van: Ien Ang: Het geval Dallas. Populaire kultuur, ideologie en plezier. Amsterdam, SUA, 1982
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