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Maritime archaeology and underwater cultural heritage management
have become well established over the past twenty years or so in
the Asia-Pacific region, particularly in Australia. During that
period Australian researchers and underwater cultural heritage
managers have conducted a significant number of important maritime
archaeological investigations and have developed innovative
approaches to the discipline.
Subject areas discussed in this book include shipwrecks and
abandoned vessels, underwater site formation processes, maritime
infrastructure and industries such as whaling, submerged aircraft
and Australian Indigenous sites underwater. The application of
National and State legislation and management regimes to these
underwater cultural heritage sites is also highlighted, together
with the important role of avocational divers and training programs
in raising the profile of underwater and maritime heritage
sites.
The book includes a comprehensive bibliography of work conducted
both in Australia and by Australian maritime archaeologists in the
Asia-Pacific region. This book will be of interest to students and
practitioners of maritime and historical archaeology and cultural
heritage managers throughout the world as example of good practice
and innovative approaches to maritime archaeology.
The establishment of a consumer society in Australia has not been a
particularly well explored area of academic inquiry. My interests
lie in the concepts and meanings that underlie the material world;
ideas like, in the words of Madonna, "I am a material girl and I
live in a material world" (terminology taken to be not gender
specific), the classic graffiti paraphrasing of Descartes: I shop
therefore I am or perhaps simply in the "world of goods" in the
more academically respectable terms of Douglas and Isherwood
(1979). This book arises out of my longstanding interest in the
early colonial period in Australia. In part it represents an
extension of the purely "historical" research conducted for my
Master's thesis in the Department of History at the University of
Sydney which explored aspects of the diet, health and lived
experience of con victs and immigrants during their voyages to the
Australian colonies within the timeframe 1837 to 1839 (Staniforth,
1993a). More importantly, it is the culmina tion of more than
twenty-five years involvement in the excavation of shipwreck sites
in Australia starting with James Matthews (1841) in 1974, through
the test excavation of William Salthouse in 1982, continuing with
my involvement between 1985 and 1994 in the excavation of Sydney
Cove (1797) and most recently with shore-based whaling stations and
whaling shipwreck sites. In this respect, this book may be seen as
an example of what Ian Hodder (1986, p."
The establishment of a consumer society in Australia has not been a
particularly well explored area of academic inquiry. My interests
lie in the concepts and meanings that underlie the material world;
ideas like, in the words of Madonna, "I am a material girl and I
live in a material world" (terminology taken to be not gender
specific), the classic graffiti paraphrasing of Descartes: I shop
therefore I am or perhaps simply in the "world of goods" in the
more academically respectable terms of Douglas and Isherwood
(1979). This book arises out of my longstanding interest in the
early colonial period in Australia. In part it represents an
extension of the purely "historical" research conducted for my
Master's thesis in the Department of History at the University of
Sydney which explored aspects of the diet, health and lived
experience of con victs and immigrants during their voyages to the
Australian colonies within the timeframe 1837 to 1839 (Staniforth,
1993a). More importantly, it is the culmina tion of more than
twenty-five years involvement in the excavation of shipwreck sites
in Australia starting with James Matthews (1841) in 1974, through
the test excavation of William Salthouse in 1982, continuing with
my involvement between 1985 and 1994 in the excavation of Sydney
Cove (1797) and most recently with shore-based whaling stations and
whaling shipwreck sites. In this respect, this book may be seen as
an example of what Ian Hodder (1986, p.
Subject areas discussed in this book include shipwrecks and
abandoned vessels, underwater site formation processes, maritime
infrastructure and industries such as whaling, submerged aircraft
and Australian Indigenous sites underwater. The application of
National and State legislation and management regimes to these
underwater cultural heritage sites is also highlighted. The
contributors of this piece have set the standard for the practice
in Australia from which others can learn.
NON-SONNETS places procrastination-trails on centre-stage. Split
into 14-line segments, it captures and re-pastes the random, Google
Search history results generated during periods in which the author
had (unsuccessfully) committed to attempting to write a
"traditional" sonnet. Thus, it becomes both a visible record of an
unwritten sonnet, and a sonnet-cycle in itself: encapsulating the
classical form's frustrations in construction; concerns and
inconsistencies; flights-of-fancy; and the general, Shakespearean
unrequitedness of everyday life.
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