45 found
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  1.  30
    The university in the global age: reconceptualising the humanities and social sciences for the twenty-first century.Scott Doidge, John Doyle & Trevor Hogan - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (11):1126-1138.
    By any metric, the twentieth century university was a successful institution. However, in the twenty-first century, ongoing neoliberal educational reform has been accompanied by a growing epistemological crisis in the meaning and value of the humanities and social sciences (HaSS). Concerns have been expressed in two main forms. The governors of tertiary education systems—governments, private investors, university managers and consultancy firms—have focused on how HaSS can adapt to the perceived research needs of the 21st century. At the same time, a (...)
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  2. In but Not of Asia: Reflections on Philippine Nationalism as Discourse, Project and Evaluation.Trevor Hogan - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 84 (1):115-132.
    This article rehearses the critical theory of Craig Calhoun’s book on nationalism and applies his threefold typology of ‘project, discourse, evaluation’ to the peculiar case of modern Philippine nationalism. The Republic of the Philippines is a marine archipelago of over 7100 islands and 85 million people of various ethnic, linguistic and cultural identities. Because of its history of colonizations (Spanish, American, Japanese), the predominance of Christianity, and the lack of a unified or prestigious pre-modern religious, political or economic order, the (...)
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  3. Introduction.Peter Beilharz & Trevor Hogan - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 74 (1):3-5.
  4.  27
    `Nature Strip': Australian Suburbia and the Enculturation of Nature.Trevor Hogan - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 74 (1):54-75.
    Australia is a suburban nation, with 85 percent of the 20 million people clinging to the coastal fringes of the world's largest island and oldest continent. This article explores Australian suburbia as the `third space' that mediates urbanism to `nature'. It draws on the thought of George Seddon, an important initiator of ecological history, regional geography and sub/urban politics in Australia. Seddon's insights on Australian ecosystems and Australian interpretations, namings, perceptions and shapings of their natural environment since the beginning of (...)
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  5.  40
    The Spaces of Poverty: Zygmunt Bauman `After' Jeremy Seabrook.Trevor Hogan - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 70 (1):72-87.
    The poor might always be with us but neither in ways that we imagine them nor in circumstances of their own choosing. Poverty (and its subject class, the poor) has been a persistent presence in the modern social sciences - both as ethical shadow and methodological stimulus. Throughout his self-described career as `professional storyteller of the contemporary human condition', Bauman's hermeneutical, dialectical and anthropological foci and modus operandi are impressively consistent, none more so than in his reflections on the problem (...)
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  6. Postcolonial Cities: A View from Jakarta.Trevor Hogan - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 73 (1):113-121.
  7. Reviews : Jeremy Seabrook, The Leisure Society (Blackwell, 1988).Trevor Hogan - 1991 - Thesis Eleven 29 (1):123-126.
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  8. Introduction to George Seddon.Trevor Hogan - 2001 - Thesis Eleven 65 (1):65-67.
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  9. Introduction.David Roberts & Trevor Hogan - 2000 - Thesis Eleven 61 (1):3-4.
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  10. Discordant order: Manila’s neo-patrimonial urbanism.Trevor Hogan - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 112 (1):10-34.
    Manila is one of the world’s most fragmented, privatized and un-public of cities. Why is this so? This paper contemplates the seemingly immutable privacy of the city of Manila, and the paradoxical character of its publicity. Manila is our prime exemplar of the 21st-century mega-city whose apparent disorder discloses a coherent order which we here call ‘neo-patrimonial urbanism’. Manila is a city where poor and rich alike have their own government, infrastructure, and armies, the shopping malls are the simulacra of (...)
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  11.  76
    Rock ‘n’ Labels: Tracking the Australian recording industry in ‘The Vinyl Age’: Part Two: 1970–1995, and after.Clinton J. Walker, Trevor Hogan & Peter Beilharz - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 110 (1):112-131.
    Over the past 50 years, rock music has been the prime mover of an emergent national recording industry in Australia. This is a story in turn of increasing size, complexity, diversity, and sophistication, before its ultimate decline into the 21st century. This story has not been told in full previously and this article is a first step to make good this gap in the historical and cultural sociology of popular music. In this study, which has two parts, we survey record (...)
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  12. Citizenship, Australian and Global.Trevor Hogan - 1996 - Thesis Eleven 46 (1):97-114.
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  13. Introduction.Johann P. Arnason, Trevor Hogan & Peter Murphy - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 72 (1):5-7.
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  14. Media and mediated popular cultures in India.Trevor Hogan & Ira Raja - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 113 (1):3-10.
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  15. Discordant order: Manila’s neo-patrimonial urbanism.Peter Murphy & Trevor Hogan - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 112 (1):10-34.
    Manila is one of the world’s most fragmented, privatized and un-public of cities. Why is this so? This paper contemplates the seemingly immutable privacy of the city of Manila, and the paradoxical character of its publicity. Manila is our prime exemplar of the 21st-century mega-city whose apparent disorder discloses a coherent order which we here call ‘neo-patrimonial urbanism’. Manila is a city where poor and rich alike have their own government, infrastructure, and armies, the shopping malls are the simulacra of (...)
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  16. George Seddon 23 April 1927 — 9 May 2007.Trevor Hogan - 2007 - Thesis Eleven 91 (1):107-109.
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  17. Rock ‘n’ labels: Tracking the Australian recording industry in ‘The Vinyl Age’: Part One, 1945–1970.Clinton J. Walker, Trevor Hogan & Peter Beilharz - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 109 (1):71-88.
    Over the past 50 years, rock music has been the prime mover of an emergent national recording industry in Australia. In this study, which has two parts, we survey record labels, recording techniques and forms, and the music that was bought and sold. Part One narrates the emergence of modern record production, the rise of rock music, and the development of a local recording industry in Australia between 1945 and 1970. Part Two (to be published in Thesis Eleven 110) recounts (...)
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  18. Manila’s urbanism and Philippine visual cultures.Trevor Hogan & Caleb J. Hogan - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 112 (1):3-9.
    Cities are sites and crucibles of creativity and destruction. How we order and imagine ourselves is revealed by the visible forms of our built environments. Cities are the ultimate material expression of human desire and design. They are also forces of energy and fields of tension that structure our everyday imaginings and activities. How we move, think, act, interact, create and maintain our lives is bounded by what cities provide us. How we make common-wealth and differentiate ourselves from others also (...)
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  19.  4
    Beilharz blues: Looking backward (2023)/looking forward (1953).Trevor Hogan, Christopher Robbins & Sian Supski - 2023 - Thesis Eleven 179 (1):295-297.
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  20.  4
    Pete as mentor, colleague, collaborator, friend: ‘Thanks, pal!’.Trevor Hogan - 2023 - Thesis Eleven 179 (1):184-196.
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  21.  8
    Places We Been.Peter Beilharz & Trevor Hogan - 2022 - Thesis Eleven 172 (1):182-188.
    In response to the wonderful work of the editors and contributors to this special issue, we offer some combined reflections on the importance of place to the Thesis Eleven project, broadly defined, and including the textbooks that grew out of this field. We return to the impact and influence of two major intellectual resources in the work and thinking of Bernard Smith and George Seddon. These mavericks helped us to think our own sense of place, and to engage with the (...)
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  22.  97
    Thesis Eleven Centre for Critical Theory: Annual Reports 2005—6.Peter Beilharz, Trevor Hogan & Tracy Lee - 2007 - Thesis Eleven 91 (1):89-103.
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  23.  15
    Watersheds in watersheds: The fate of the planet’s major river systems in the Great Acceleration.Ruth Gamble & Trevor Hogan - 2019 - Thesis Eleven 150 (1):3-25.
    Humans have, by biological necessity, always lived in watersheds. This article provides an overview of humans’ relationship to these watersheds as an introduction to a special issue of Thesis Eleven on watersheds. It describes the basic functioning of watersheds, how humans have always depended on them, and how they have slowly begun to manipulate them. Humans across the planet began by making strategic adjustments to water’s downward flow to aid the procurement of water and fish. As small states, empires, and (...)
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  24.  32
    Against Reduction: Jeffrey Alexander and the Constructive Tasks of Social Theory.Trevor Hogan - 2004 - Thesis Eleven 79 (1):37-42.
    The practice of social theory is too often given to celebrity hunting, the polemical vulgarizing of one’s putative enemies, or the precocious production of totalizing and redemptive theories purporting to rescue social theory from its perennial crises of meaning, naming and explanation. The constructive task of social theory, however, can be both more modest and productive when attention is given to its substantive concern to provide codes, narratives and explanations of modernity, in all its pluralist and democratic dimensions. This is (...)
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  25. A Walk in the Cordilleras-September 1986 part 2.Trevor Hogan - 2006 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 10 (3):164-183.
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  26. A Walk in the Cordilleras-September 1986 part 1.Trevor Hogan - 2006 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 10 (3):143-163.
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  27.  29
    Big city blues.Trevor Hogan & Julian Potter - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 121 (1):3-8.
    The advent of the ‘mega’ or world city seems inseparable from the ambivalent and transient experience of modernity – the ideals of liberty, individuality, property, accelerating progress, and, for many, the realities of immobility, anonymity, poverty, and arresting regression. When more than half of the global population pursues an existence within an urban frame, the densities and boundaries of urban spaces swell to fantastical proportions. With the vast increase in size, so the experiences and expectations of the city become more (...)
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  28.  20
    Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila, and Singapore.Trevor Hogan - 2005 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 9 (1):157-162.
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  29.  15
    Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila, and Singapore.Trevor Hogan - 2005 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 9 (1).
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  30.  45
    `First of the Moderns': Reading Carlyle Reading Goethe, Again.Trevor Hogan - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 72 (1):46-64.
    This article reads Carlyle as a reader of Goethe to recover why he proclaimed Goethe as the `benignant spiritual revolutionist' of modernity and `first of the moderns'. As Goethe's first major English translator, Thomas Carlyle was also arguably the first to grasp the nature and purpose of Goethe's project to interpret modernity as a revolutionary epoch involving changes in consciousness, culture and material development. For Carlyle, Goethe's Faust presents modern consciousness and culture from the side of elegy - as the (...)
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  31.  4
    Keith Tester – memories of a friendship.Trevor Hogan - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 158 (1):9-11.
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  32. Letter from Manila.Trevor Hogan - 2001 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 5 (1):209-214.
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  33.  20
    Modes of indigenous modernity: Identities, stories, pathways.Trevor Hogan & Priti Singh - 2018 - Thesis Eleven 145 (1):3-9.
    This special issue is the outcome of a collaborative venture – a three-day workshop between La Trobe University and Ateneo de Manila University, held in Manila. It brought together indigenous and non-indigenous researchers from both the Philippines and Australia and included aboriginal researchers in business studies, history, literature and anthropology, and non-indigenous researchers working on themes of indigenous history, material culture, film studies, literature, the visual arts, law and linguistics. The ‘indigenous’ peoples of the Philippines are very different to Australian (...)
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  34. Rethinking Southeast Asian Cities: The Case of Manila.Trevor Hogan - 2004 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 7 (3):103-128.
     
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  35.  33
    The Uses of Failure: Christian Socialism as a Nomadic City of the Gift Economy.Trevor Hogan - 2005 - Thesis Eleven 80 (1):74-93.
    Socialism is dead and Christianity, at least in the modern West, is not feeling too good either. What remains of the substantive goals, ethics, and ideals of socialism in an epoch of political defeat and in the aftermath of a century of tragic experiments? Are ‘still existing’ socialists simply nostalgic, seeking consolation in an opiate of lost dreams, or are there fragments of ideas and policies that constitute a still living politics of hope for humanity? Christian socialism is one socialist (...)
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  36.  68
    Writing Oz pop: An insider’s account of Australian popular culture making and historiography: An interview with Clinton J Walker.Trevor Hogan & Peter Beilharz - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 109 (1):89-114.
    This interview – conducted by Peter Beilharz and Trevor Hogan with Clinton Walker over the course of three months between Melbourne and Sydney via email and Skype – explores the questions of Australian popular culture writing with, against, and of the culture industries themselves. Walker is a leading freelance Australian cultural historian and rock music journalist. He is the author of seven books, five about Australian music. He has been a radio DJ and TV presenter. He compiled and produced four (...)
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  37.  77
    Book review: Not Dark Yet: A Personal HistoryWalkerDavid, Not Dark Yet: A Personal History. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2013 - Thesis Eleven 115 (1):141-145.
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  38. Reviews : Mitchell Dean, The Constitution of Poverty: Toward a Genealogy of Liberal Governance (Routledge, 1991). [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 1992 - Thesis Eleven 33 (1):171-173.
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  39. Reviews : Robyn Eckersley, Environmentalism and Political Theory: Toward an Ecocentric Approach (State University of New York/ucl Press, 1992); Robert E. Goodin, Green Political Theory (Polity Press, 1992); Peter Hay and Robyn Eckersley (eds), Ecopolitical Theory: Essaysfrom Australia, (Board of Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, 1992); Peter Hay, Robyn Eckersley and Geoff Holloway (eds) Environmental Politics in Australia and New Zealand (Board of Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, 1989); Drew Hutton (ed.), Green Politics in Australia (Angus and Robertson, 1987); Michael Muetzelfeldt (ed.), Society, State and Politics in Australia (Pluto Press, 1992). [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 1994 - Thesis Eleven 38 (1):165-177.
    Reviews : Robyn Eckersley, Environmentalism and Political Theory: Toward an Ecocentric Approach ; Robert E. Goodin, Green Political Theory ; Peter Hay and Robyn Eckersley, Ecopolitical Theory: Essaysfrom Australia, ; Peter Hay, Robyn Eckersley and Geoff Holloway Environmental Politics in Australia and New Zealand ; Drew Hutton, Green Politics in Australia ; Michael Muetzelfeldt, Society, State and Politics in Australia.
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  40. Book Review: The Old Country: Australian Landscapes, Plants and People. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 87 (1):137-139.
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  41.  10
    Book review: Everyday life in the modern world. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 71 (1).
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  42.  15
    Book review: The Roots of Radicalism: Tradition, the Public Sphere and Early Nineteenth-Century Social Movements. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 138 (1):146-148.
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  43.  1
    Introduction to George Seddon. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2001 - Thesis Eleven 65 (1):65-67.
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  44.  2
    Reviews : Jeremy Seabrook, The Leisure Society (Blackwell, 1988). [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 1991 - Thesis Eleven 29 (1):123-126.
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  45.  5
    Book review: Not Dark Yet: A Personal History. [REVIEW]Trevor Hogan - 2013 - Thesis Eleven 115 (1):141-145.
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