16 September 2024

Here's a summary of journal articles and book chapters authored or co-authored by CP3 members in the past 3 months.

Journal title:    npj Urban Sustain 
Article title:     Emergent digital possibilities for design-led reuse within circular economy
Authors:            Dr Guy Keulemans & Roxane Adams
Date:                  4 July 2024
Summary:        In this article we review technologies of 3D scanning, BIM and generative AI for design-led, transformative repair and reuse, and present our own experiments using 3D scanning and BIM for reducing waste. An important part of the article is a discussion on how these technologies can respond to the granularisation of materials, framed by transition design theory and cosmopolitan-localism, with special attention given to timber and wood.  
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Journal title:    Continuum
Article title:      A queer feast of memories: using archives in festival research
Authors:             Dr Jess Pacella & Dr Stuart Richards
Date:                   30 July 2024
Summary:         Founded in 1997 by arts and community workers, the Feast Festival in Adelaide is one of the major LGBTQIA+ festivals held in Australia. 2022 marked the 25th year of the Feast Festival and, as such, was an opportunity to reflect upon the importance of community-driven festivals, especially those that explicitly services and advocates for social and cultural minorities. Researching this queer history required multimodal strategies. We interviewed past participants, organizers and performers, which contributed to a short documentary film that was exhibited as part of Feast’s 25th programme. This project has also been supported by extensive archival research. 
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Journal title:    Social Identities
Article title:      The Viennese waltz: social transformation and the shock of the new
Authors:             Professor Jon Stratton
Date:                   5 August 2024
Summary:         The Viennese waltz was the first vernacular, modern dance. Modern, here, Carrie’s the meaning of modernity. Such dances have an expressive relationship with the body and this requires a specific discursive understanding of what a body is and how it can be experienced. That is, modern, vernacular dancing is a function of the modern body. 
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Journal title:    Continuum
Article title:      The Nutbush Reframed: further analysis related to ‘Doing the Nutbush’
Authors:             Professor Jon Stratton & P. Allmark
Date:                   14 August 2024
Summary:         This article supplements our earlier article on the Nutbush dance, ‘Doing the Nutbush’. After that was published, there was a media frenzy which resulted in many comments on The Guardian site and on the ABC Facebook site. We also received a number of emails. All these contributions have helped fine-tune the history of the dance that we have been examining. Two key things became clear.   
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Book:                      Shores, Surfaces and Depths: Oceanic Cultures of Tourism and Leisure
Editors:                   Felicity Picken and Emma Waterton
Series:                     Routledge Studies in Cultural History
Publisher:              Routledge, London
Chapter title:        Entangling Early: Rebuilding Passion for Natural and Cultural Terroir for Post-Covid, Low-Carbon Societies
Chapter author:   Professor Adrian Franklin
Date:                       November 2024
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Book:                      How to Edit and Manage a Successful Scholarly Journal
Editors:                   I. Hay, G. Butler and G. Szili
Publisher:              Edward Elgar Publishing: London
Chapter title:        Guest editing journal special issues: triumphs, tribulations and tips to maximise the former and minimise the latter
Chapter author:   Dr Matthew Rofe and M. Ripmeester
Date:                        September 2024

Book:                      Global Iconoclasm: Contesting "Official" Mnemonic Landscapes
Editors:                  Dr Matthew Rofe and M. Ripmeester
Publisher:              Springer: Berlin
Chapter titles:     Global Iconoclasm: An Introduction
                                 Acts of ongoing repression? A critical analysis of Aboriginal cultural-heritage protection legislation in postcolonial Australia
Chapter author:  M. Ripmeester and Dr Matthew Rofe
Date:                       September 2024

Book:                     Call Me by Your Name: Perspectives on the Film
Editors:                  E. Lamberti & M. Williams
Publisher:             Intellect
Chapter title:      ‘Is It Better to Speak or Die?’: Adaptation and Elio’s Interiority
Chapter author:  Dr Stuart Richards
Date:                       September 2024
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Book:                     Critical Approaches to the Australian Blue Humanities
Editors:                  M. Newlands & C. Hansen
Publisher:             Routledge
Chapter title:      'A dancing creature of crimson and yellow": Writing the Great Barrier Reef
Chapter author:  Dr Jessica White
Date:                       September 2024
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