2024-03-29T09:06:14Z
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/cgi/oai2
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:45278
2023-10-24T02:00:42Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B
Treading air
Van Luyn, Ariella
In 1920s Queensland, Lizzie O'Dea wants to get away from her dad and the memories of her mum that haunt her. At the races she meets attractive, war-scarred Joe and sees her chance to escape. But life with Joe isn't what she dreamt it would be.
Finding herself on the fringes of society, Lizzie discovers a new sense of independence and sexuality, love and friendship. It's a precarious life, though, always on the edge of collapse.
Two decades later, Lizzie is sick and worn out. Lying in a Brisbane lock hospital, she thinks about Joe, who's been lost to her for many years. But she's a survivor. There's hope yet.
Set between Brisbane and Townsville, and based on real events that the author uncovered from historical archives, Treading Air is the remarkably vivid tale of a young Australian working-class rebel who clashed with the expectations of her world.
Simon and Schuster
2016
Book
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/45278/6/45278-Van-Luyn-2016.pdf
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/45278/11/45278%20Van%20Luyn%202016%20-%20Chapter%202.pdf
http://affirmpress.com.au/publishing/treading-air/
Van Luyn, Ariella (2016) Treading air. Simon and Schuster, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/45278/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:46263
2017-01-23T01:00:43Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Writing groups in the digital age: a case study analysis of Shut Up & Write Tuesdays
O'Dwyer, Siobhan T.
McDonough, Sharon L.
Jefferson, Rebecca
Goff, Jennifer Ann
Redman-Maclaren, Michelle
Social media writing groups are an emerging phenomenon in the academic world. Combining the discipline, mentorship, and peer support of face-to-face writing groups, with the convenience, global reach, and interdisciplinary networks of social media, they offer a way for scholars to apply new digital technologies to the old problem of developing, maintaining, and protecting an academic writing practice. Despite their growing popularity, however, there has been little critical or empirical analysis of these groups. Using Shut Up & Write Tuesdays (SUWT) as a case study, this chapter examines the purpose, use, outcomes, and challenges of a social media writing group for academics. Usage data from the three SUWT Twitter accounts, a survey of SUWT participants, and the narrative reflections of the SUWT hosts, are drawn together to highlight the value, strengths, and limitations of social media writing groups as a scholarly activity in the digital age.
IGI Global
Esposito, Antonella
2017
Book Chapter
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/46263/6/46263_MacLaren_2017.pdf
http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-0830-4.ch013
O'Dwyer, Siobhan T., McDonough, Sharon L., Jefferson, Rebecca, Goff, Jennifer Ann, and Redman-Maclaren, Michelle (2017) Writing groups in the digital age: a case study analysis of Shut Up & Write Tuesdays. In: Esposito, Antonella, (ed.) Research 2.0 and the Impact of Digital Technologies on Scholarly Inquiry. Advances in Knowledge Acquisition, Transfer, and Management (AKATM) . IGI Global, Hershey, PA, USA, pp. 249-269.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/46263/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:59832
2020-02-13T04:52:29Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Storymaking belonging
Bunda, Tracey
Heckenberg, Robyn
Snepvangers, Kim
Phillips, Louise Gwenneth
Lasczik, Alexandra
Black, Alison L.
Sometimes data invites more of us. To be physically held and touched,through hands creating and crafting with matter, cultivating a closer connection to the
fibres, threads, textures and sinews of data. Through touching and shaping the materiality of data, other beings, places and times are aroused. Here, we share the
story of data that invited more of us and how this has spurred the creation of an exhibition titled Stories of Belonging with Indigenous and non-Indigenous artist/scholars for an arts festival in Queensland, Australia. This work by the collective, SISTAS Holding
Space, deeply interrogates our ontological positionality as researchers, in particular what this means in the Australian context – a colonised nation populated through waves of migration. The scars of colonization, migration and shame are held and heard through Black and White Australian women creating and interrogating belonging
alongside each other – listening and holding space for each other. We air the pains of ontological destruction, silencing, disconnection and emptiness. Through experimental making research methodology, we argue the primacy of storying and making, and for provoking resonant and entangled understandings of belonging and displacement.
University of Alberta
2019
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/59832/1/29429-Article%20Text-80487-1-10-20190226.pdf
https://doi.org/10.18432/ari29429
Bunda, Tracey, Heckenberg, Robyn, Snepvangers, Kim, Phillips, Louise Gwenneth, Lasczik, Alexandra, and Black, Alison L. (2019) Storymaking belonging. Art Research International: A Transdisciplinary Journal, 4 (1). pp. 153-179.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/59832/
open
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:60983
2023-10-24T00:16:28Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Satelle's machine
Maguire, Emma
[Extract] On Earth, Satelle is working in a music store while she gets her degree in computer science and engineering. At the end of long days, she travels home on the bus and reads stories in free literary magazines she finds on the Internet, about urban and suburban twenty-somethings having twenty-something crises. She fills her Instagram feed with photos of seascapes and stars, Icelandic coasts and old cars, and some choice black-and-white shots of a young Vincent Price. Sometimes she puts leftovers out for the stray cat that hangs around her apartment.
One evening while she’s writing an essay about the history of Unicode, a message lights up her phone. It’s from a girl she once knew...
Scum Mag
2019
Article
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/60983/1/Satelle%E2%80%99s%20Machine%20_%20Scum%20Mag.pdf
https://www.scum-mag.com/satelles-machine/
Maguire, Emma (2019) Satelle's machine. Scum Mag, 2 September 2019.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/60983/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:63251
2020-06-09T05:57:43Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Mothering bodies in unloving institutions
Phillips, Louise Gwenneth
Johnson, Helen
Misra, Sarah
Zavros-Orr, Agli
Four mothers in academia collaboratively story their lived encounters, bringing differing identities, circumstances and experiences of collective exhaustion. They do this by creatively writing lived experiences, sharing these with each other, holding and feeling these lived encounters over time then creatively responding back with gifted crafted words and imagery. Reflection on these gifts and how they bring new insight to lived experiences create collated multi-vocal biographies. Through their collective arts-based poetic and visual inquiry they see reflections and diffractions in each other’s lived stories that metaphorically provoke understandings of the pain swept into the unforgiving corners of cold, unloving universities. This work is creative resistance: to write from the body gives pearls of pleasure and joy in unloving institutions.
Palgrave Macmillan
Henderson, Linda
Black, Alison. L.
Garvis, Susie
2020
Book Chapter
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/63251/1/Mothering%20bodies.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38211-7_3
Phillips, Louise Gwenneth, Johnson, Helen, Misra, Sarah, and Zavros-Orr, Agli (2020) Mothering bodies in unloving institutions. In: Henderson, Linda, Black, Alison. L., and Garvis, Susie, (eds.) (Re)birthing the feminine in Academe: Creating Spaces of Motherhood in Patriarchal Contexts. Palgrave Studies in Gender and Education . Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland, pp. 49-82.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/63251/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:67913
2023-01-05T00:33:25Z
7374617475733D756E707562
74797065733D746865736973
The narrative possibilities of humour in regional family memoir: a creative writing exploration in Australian regional life-writing
Crowe, Nicole
Nicole Crowe's practice-led creative writing thesis investigated the possibilities of humour in regional family memoir. Her creative work offers a counterpoint to the recent trend toward trauma narrative in life writing. In 2018, Nicole was awarded a place in the nationally competitive Hachette Manuscript Development Program for her creative work, and she is currently working with a literary agent to bring her work to publishable standard.
2019
Thesis
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67913/7/JCU_67913_Crowe_2019_thesis.pdf
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67913/9/JCU_67913_Crowe_2019_ExegesisComponentOnly.pdf
https://doi.org/10.25903/f54r-me90
Crowe, Nicole (2019) The narrative possibilities of humour in regional family memoir: a creative writing exploration in Australian regional life-writing. PhD thesis, James Cook University.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67913/
embargo
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:69649
2023-09-01T19:34:51Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Choke me, daddy?: the subversive power of consensual pain
Maguire, Emma
[Extract] Have you ever played around with power roles in the bedroom? Maybe you’ve tried some teacher/student role play? Maybe you’ve dabbled in restraints or spanking? Maybe you’ve had a partner ask you to choke them during sex? It can be a turn-on to be given total power over your partner’s body, or to give up control and lose yourself deliciously in surrender.
Lip Media Inc
2020
Article
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69649/1/69649_Maguire_2020.pdf
https://lipmag.com/featured/choke-me-daddy-the-subversive-power-of-consensual-pain/
Maguire, Emma (2020) Choke me, daddy?: the subversive power of consensual pain. Lip Magazine, 25 February 2020.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69649/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:69652
2023-10-23T01:53:58Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Under the Corn
Maguire, Emma
‘Under the Corn’ by Australian writer and researcher Emma Maguire is a thrillingly scary, eerie and evocative short story inspired by the Furies of Greek mythology: three sisters, polar opposites of the Fates or Muses, whose primary concern was delivering retribution for the killing of family members. 'Under the Corn' displaces the myth of the Furies to a Southern Gothic setting, as a hag visits three sisters with a dark secret they'll do anything to keep.
Verity La Inc.
2020
Article
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69652/7/69652.pdf
https://verityla.com/2020/06/01/under-the-corn-emma-maguire/
Maguire, Emma (2020) Under the Corn. Verity La.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69652/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:69655
2023-12-11T06:18:21Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
A Mother’s Milk: Motherhood, Trauma, and Monstrous Children in Folk Horror
Maguire, Emma
In A Mother’s Milk I use the supernatural tropes of Folk Horror to explore the dark psychological territory of maternal trauma. The figure of the changeling, which has appeared in several works of Folk Horror, is underpinned by the mother-child bond (which gives the mother a special ability to know her own child from an identical copy) as well as the maternal fear of the abducted child. As such, the changeling story is ripe with possibility for exploring themes of trauma and mental illness in relation to dysfunctional mother-child relationships.
Amsterdam University Press
Craven, Allison
Balanzategui, Jessica
2023
Book Chapter
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69655/3/69655.pdf
https://www.aup.nl/en/book/9789463726344/monstrous-beings-and-media-cultures
Maguire, Emma (2023) A Mother’s Milk: Motherhood, Trauma, and Monstrous Children in Folk Horror. In: Craven, Allison, and Balanzategui, Jessica, (eds.) Monstrous Beings and Media Cultures: Folk Monsters, Im/Materiality, Regionality. Horror and Gothic Media Cultures . Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, Netherlands, pp. 145-171.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/69655/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:73728
2024-02-29T14:33:08Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
The Semantics of Starvation
Burrows, Lianda
[Extract] I used to go down to the local pool, biding time between hospital stints. I waded in the shallow end through the heat of summer as my sister did laps in the next lane. I could often only walk a few steps before stopping. My lungs felt strained and my heart had developed random piercing pains. A lifeguard watched closely from nearby. I remember looking at myself in the change room afterwards and being frightened. I had initially caught sight of myself in my peripheral vision and I—unexpectedly—suddenly appeared clearly. I normally saw myself as I had always looked and struggled to perceive the changes wrought by a thirty-kilo weight loss. But when I saw myself, this time, from the corner of my eye, it struck me that I looked like a starved bird. All bones and veins, palpitating. I was a diaphanous skeleton with human gestures, but without a face. An assortment of features had gathered on my skull, but failed to impersonate anything recognisably human. I avoided eye contact because when I found it I saw nothing but a reflection of the spectre I had become.
University of Western Australia
Noske, Catherine
2019
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/73728/7/73728.pdf
https://westerlymag.com.au/issues/64-2/
Burrows, Lianda (2019) The Semantics of Starvation. Westerly, 64 (2). pp. 57-65.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/73728/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:76260
2023-11-29T02:58:43Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Writing an Australian Farm Novel: Connecting Regions via Magic Realism
Smyth, Elizabeth A.
Contemporary farming often involves more machines, access to information, and public pressure to protect or regenerate non-human nature than in the past. However, this is scarcely reflected in the farm novel, which is largely bound to an historical era. Australian farm novels include Benjamin Cozens’ Princess of the Mallee (1903), John Naish’s The Cruel Field (1962), Randolph Stow’s The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea (1965), and Carrie Tiffany’s Everyman’s Rules for Scientific Living (2005). Each feature realism and pre-1960s settings. In this article, I propose a major revision of the farm novel by employing magic realism to challenge Australia’s realist representations of farming as a rational, money-making enterprise. Magic realism allows me to position Australia’s dominant profit-driven approach to agriculture as fantasy and hopefully to stimulate new notions of farming and the farmer. By casting sugarcane and machines as a colonial farming alliance and humans as their marginalized subjects, I draw attention to a gradual depopulation of rural lands, subvert a persistent anthropocentric element of the settler-colonial ideology, and challenge notions of humans controlling the farm. This article is also a case study in a performance of John Kinsella’s international regionalism (He, 2021; Kinsella, 2001), in which Australia’s Wet Tropics connects with creative writing discourse.
Australian Association of Writing Programs
2022
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76260/1/76260.pdf
https://doi.org/10.52086/001c.40224
Smyth, Elizabeth A. (2022) Writing an Australian Farm Novel: Connecting Regions via Magic Realism. Text, 26 (2). pp. 1-16.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76260/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:76818
2023-10-24T01:55:02Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
The Horses of Buhen
Kelso, Sylvia
Sequel to "The Price of Kush," short story set around the 19th Century BC Kingdom of Kush, near neighbor, rival and repeatedly attacked and/or colonized source of wealth to Ancient Egypt, during the interregnum of the 17th and 18th Dynasties. Focuses on women in a culture that allows female rulers and warriors.
Eternal Haunted Summer
Buchanan, Rebecca
2016
Article
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76818/1/76818.pdf
https://eternalhauntedsummer.com/issues/summer-solstice-2016/the-horses-of-buhen/
Kelso, Sylvia (2016) The Horses of Buhen. Eternal Haunted Summer, Summer Solstice 2016.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76818/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:76833
2023-09-01T19:35:06Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D63726561746976655F776F726B
A Moment in Laramidia
Kelso, Sylvia
Short story positing an alternate world where dinosaurs did not go extinct and quantum theory would allow a "traveller" to move between that universe and this.
Wolfsinger Press
McFarland-Kyle, Rebecca
Campbell, J. A.
2016
Creative Work
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76833/1/76833.pdf
Kelso, Sylvia (2016) A Moment in Laramidia. [Creative Work]
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76833/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:76834
2023-10-24T01:30:20Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Not So Loud
Kelso, Sylvia
Short story exploring ambiguity in viewer response to god/monster figures in post-space-migration future on Tau Ceti B
Schreyer Ink Publishing
Schreyer, Casia
2017
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76834/1/76834.pdf
https://schreyerinkpublishing.wordpress.com/
Kelso, Sylvia (2017) Not So Loud. In: Schreyer, Casia, (ed.) Open Minds. Schreyer Ink Publishing.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76834/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:76837
2023-10-24T01:22:38Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Death and the Maiden
Kelso, Sylvia
Prequel to the novel "The Moving Water", tracing life of the Empress Moriana when,as a girl, she fought her way to the throne of Assharral.
Crimson Edge Press
Rekker, Allison
2017
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76837/1/76837.pdf
Kelso, Sylvia (2017) Death and the Maiden. In: Rekker, Allison, (ed.) Maidens and Magic. Crimson Edge Press, Huntersville, NC, USA, pp. 143-235.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/76837/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:77666
2024-03-03T15:08:53Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
“A story with many rooms”: Twine as a tool to expand life writing practice about place and space
Jones, Mia-Francesca
This article will explore how hypertext technology in Twine might be used by writers to expand and augment creative nonfiction life writing about place and space. Twine is a digital storytelling platform for creating interactive, nonlinear choose-your-own-adventure type narratives. Using a case study of a personal essay on homesickness written by the author of this article using Twine, this paper argues that Twine’s functionalities can be employed to represent and explore associative networks of memories and multi-directional thought pathways. Drawing on place theory by Gaston Bachelard and Edward Casey, it responds to the questions: how might writers represent living and moving through the multi-directional and multitemporal nature of place? And what new mediums could be employed to reflect the exploratory creative research process of life writing about place?
Australian Association of Writing Programs
2022
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/77666/1/77666.pdf
https://doi.org/10.52086/001c.57762
Jones, Mia-Francesca (2022) “A story with many rooms”: Twine as a tool to expand life writing practice about place and space. Text, 26 (69).
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/77666/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:79737
2023-09-27T01:07:24Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B
The Strangest Places
Kelso, Sylvia
An upheaval on the Greenland ice-cap; gods and battles on the border of Kush just before Ancient Egypt’s 18th dynasty; dark fantasy based around the Wurzburg Prince-Bishop’s Palace; some post-human-diaspora SF on Tau Ceti B; an alternate history moment in Cretaceous Laramidia. Strange places where people find themselves in strange situations … and what happened then.
Book View Café
2023
Book
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79737/2/79737.pdf
https://bookviewcafe.com/book/the-strangest-places/
Kelso, Sylvia (2023) The Strangest Places. Book View Café, Las Vegas, NV, USA.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79737/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:79895
2023-09-01T19:35:15Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Not the Boss, But Still a Man
Smyth, Elizabeth
[Extract] Once a croc clamps onto you, nothing will get it off. It rolls you over and over, thrashing and splashing, until you drown. Barry Starke knows this. He wades through the turbid water wicking up towards his armpits. In one hand, he grips a red fuel drum; in the other, an open pocketknife. He could be pulled into a death roll any second. Because all it takes for a croc to kill is hunger and awareness of prey.
Barry tries not to make a splash. Crossing the Uncanny River is crazy, he knows, but he has to get home to call the bank. He couldn’t go back the way he had come because the lead to the spark plug broke when he crashed. The bike won’t run. At first he was angry. He should have been looking where he was going, instead of gazing into the distance, searching for a missing bull. But worse than that, he’d left his toolbox and phone in the shed. So he did what he could: kicked the ground, wiped his grazed arm with a dirty hand, and set off for the river.
Tropical Writers
McDonald, Sally
2017 Anthology Committee,
2017
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79895/7/79895.pdf
Smyth, Elizabeth (2017) Not the Boss, But Still a Man. In: McDonald, Sally, and 2017 Anthology Committee, , (eds.) Free Fall. Tropical Writers Anthology, 7 . Tropical Writers, Cairns, QLD, Australia, pp. 92-94.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79895/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:79896
2023-09-01T19:35:15Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Will it Leave a Scar?
Smyth, Elizabeth
[Extract] Ebanee pinches her nose to stop herself from crying. And Mum looks at her with those volcano eyes, all red around the edges. Ebanee had a sore like that once, I remember, wet and leaking. And Mum said, ‘You have to let it dry.’ Now I watch Mum’s eyes and wait for them to scab over. Another time, Mum said she wanted to be a child like me and start her life again. She could be thinking that now. But what she doesn’t know is that some kids are luckier than others. Some kids get good things they don’t deserve. She shouldn’t want to be a kid like me.
In our family, Dad is the strongest one. He never cries. When things go wrong, he gets angry. Like the day he backed his car into a star picket. He had a mean look on his face and said stuff about insurance and a job he didn’t need. And he said a swear word. The B one. If a kid says that, they get put in time out! What Dad didn’t know is that it’s good to run into star pickets. The stars hidden in those pickets follow you home, and you get to choose a special star to be yours, and it looks after you for the rest of your life. Yeah. Dad never understands important things like that.
Tropical Writers
Owens, Rod
Barker, Peter
Serenc, Mary
2020
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79896/7/79896.pdf
Smyth, Elizabeth (2020) Will it Leave a Scar? In: Owens, Rod, Barker, Peter, and Serenc, Mary, (eds.) Green Ant Dreaming. Tropical Writers Anthology, 8 . Tropical Writers, Cairns, QLD, Australia, pp. 17-26.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79896/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:79897
2023-09-01T19:35:15Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The Silence of Loss
Smyth, Elizabeth
[Extract] SUZI SURGES FORWARD, HER THONGS IRONING LEAF LITTER, TOES clutching rubber like leeches. Her mouth hangs open. Brown curls threaten to bury a face devoid of circulation. Her vision narrows. I'm going for a walk, her son had said a few minutes ago. He can't have gone far.
A cluster of leaves sweeps across Suzi' s face as she follows a path through the forest. A three-year-old had disappeared from his home last year. The child had been out of sight for only a few minutes. Abducted by a paedophile and murdered, they said. The police searched everywhere, but he was never found. Never found.
Tropical Writers
McInnes, Jeanette
Birt, Virginia
Wagner, Lenka
Newey, Phil
2023
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79897/7/79897.pdf
Smyth, Elizabeth (2023) The Silence of Loss. In: McInnes, Jeanette, Birt, Virginia, Wagner, Lenka, and Newey, Phil, (eds.) On Butterfly Wings. Tropical Writers Anthology, 9 . Tropical Writers, Cairns, QLD, Australia, pp. 100-105.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/79897/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:80602
2023-10-04T01:32:25Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The Horses of Buhen
Kelso, Sylvia
Sequel to "The Price of Kush," short story set around the 19th Century BC Kingdom of Kush, near neighbor, rival and repeatedly attacked and/or colonized source of wealth to Ancient Egypt, during the interregnum of the 17th and 18th Dynasties. Focuses on women in a culture that allows female rulers and warriors.
Lulu Press
Buchanan, Rebecca
Malinowski, Kim
2023
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80602/1/The-Best-of-Eternal-Haunted-Summer-Print.pdf
https://www.lulu.com/shop/colleen-anderson-and-adele-gardner-and-elizabeth-r-mcclellan-and-adam-bolivar/the-best-of-eternal-haunted-summer-a-thirteenth-anniversary-edition/ebook/product-qevqz5.html?q=The+Best+of+Eternal+Haunted+Summer&page=1&pageSize=4
Kelso, Sylvia (2023) The Horses of Buhen. In: Buchanan, Rebecca, and Malinowski, Kim, (eds.) The Best of Eternal Haunted Summer: A Thirteenth Anniversary Edition. Lulu Press, pp. 123-141.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80602/
open
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:80664
2023-10-23T00:46:06Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Limoncello
Maguire, Emma
[Extract] Frida is lying in the bath thinking about drinking limoncello in the summertime. About the cold glass in her hand and the tart liquid pooling on her tongue before she swallows it. The memory – which isn’t a single memory, but a composite of sensations and scenes – makes her ache. She knows that this summer there will be no limoncello or long nights or loud music. There will be no lovers, no lie ins, no late morning pancakes crisp round the edges. No late morning cups of tea swallowed while a tongue goes deliciously to work between her legs. No gentle weight of her body floating in the ocean until freckles bloom wildly on her limbs and her face, and she rolls in with the tide to her towel and her novel and her bottle of limoncello to lie beneath the banana palms, strands of seaweed trailing behind her. Because this summer Frida is going to have a baby. And babies do not have time for liqueur, or oral sex, or novels, or the sea.
Superlative Literary Journal
2022
Article
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80664/7/80664.pdf
Maguire, Emma (2022) Limoncello. Superlative, 3.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80664/
restricted
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:81221
2023-12-21T04:03:41Z
7374617475733D756E707562
74797065733D746865736973
Re-imagining the Australian farm novel: writing magic realism into the georgic
Smyth, Elizabeth A.
Elizabeth Smyth's research asks how the Australian farm novel can be re-imagined for the 21st century, given the genre has traditionally employed historical settings and the settler-colonial worldview. She wrote a contemporary magical realist novel to explore human relationships with the nonhuman and produced a guide for writers navigating cultural interfaces.
2023
Thesis
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81221/7/JCU_81221_Smyth_2023_thesis_Redacted.pdf
https://doi.org/10.25903/r5sr-rv79
Smyth, Elizabeth A. (2023) Re-imagining the Australian farm novel: writing magic realism into the georgic. PhD thesis, James Cook University.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81221/
embargo
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:81278
2023-12-04T22:16:56Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
A Perspective from the Periphery: Re-imagining Regional North Queensland Women's Stories Using Historical Fiction
Henry, Louise
In popular published accounts from settlement and into the early part of the twentieth century the North Queensland region was often portrayed as ‘wild’. This is a perception ripe for re-examination, particularly from the perspective of women of lower socio-economic standing, and something I am exploring through my own creative work. Writing historical fiction about my grandmother’s life in North Queensland in the first half of the twentieth century requires me to consider strategies to ethically re-imagine a peripheral history that is specific to regional geography,
class, and gender. Such a task is complicated by the limited source material available about the lived experiences of poorer women living in North Queensland. The most fruitful sources are often first-hand accounts such as life writing, personal recollections, memoirs, letters, or journals. Along with oral histories, these artefacts make up the bulk of the primary archival material that forms the background and
contextual groundwork for my historical fiction. These sources are highly individual accounts specific to the time, place and era in which they were written. Historical fiction relies on an ‘authenticity effect’ (Padmore 2017) to effectively build a past world, and this article explores some of the ways these primary sources can be utilised and integrated in historical fiction to effectively and ethically represent
women living in the margins.
Australian Association of Writing Programs
2019
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81278/2/25450-a-perspective-from-the-periphery-re-imagining-regional-north-queensland-women-s-stories-using-historical-fiction.pdf
https://doi.org/10.52086/001c.25450
Henry, Louise (2019) A Perspective from the Periphery: Re-imagining Regional North Queensland Women's Stories Using Historical Fiction. Text, 23 (54).
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81278/
openpub
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:81317
2023-12-08T00:55:10Z
7374617475733D756E707562
74797065733D746865736973
Once there was a time when... Reimagining regional women's lives using historical fiction, family stories and artefacts
Henry, Louise Caroline
Louise Henry's practice-led creative writing research project explores how to ethically re-imagine family stories as representative of a broader historical story of regional women through fiction. She wrote a novel and an exegesis which demonstrates how the process of writing a novel and its final literary form achieves this.
2020
Thesis
NonPeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81317/8/JCU_81317_Henry_2020_thesis.pdf
https://doi.org/10.25903/xsbg-ty88
Henry, Louise Caroline (2020) Once there was a time when... Reimagining regional women's lives using historical fiction, family stories and artefacts. PhD thesis, James Cook University.
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81317/
open
oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:81729
2024-03-27T05:08:32Z
7374617475733D707562
74797065733D61727469636C65
Less is More? Review and Recommendations for Qualitative Sampling Strategy using the S.C.A.D.E Approach
Hiram, Ting
Turner, Daniel
Tan, Kim-Lim
Tan, Sook Rei
Wong, Munwai
Gong, Jiankun
The determination of sample size in qualitative research introduces a unique and multifaceted challenge, setting it apart from the more structured methodology of quantitative research. Contrary to sampling methods in quantitative research, which primarily aim to secure random and statistically representative samples that facilitate the generalisation of findings to broader populations, sampling in qualitative research requires a distinct set of considerations in itspursuit of a deeper understanding of specific phenomena. The objective of this editorial is to provide qualitative researchers with clear and foundational guidance for effectively communicating the methodological aspects of their research papers, particularly pertaining to sample size justification. Building on this, we present S.C.A.D.E, an acronym comprising five key actionable elements—Selecting, Clarifying, Aligning, Deploying and Evaluating—to guide researchers in determining the appropriate sample size and ensuring that datasaturation is achieved as they plan their qualitative exploration.
Asia Business Research Corporation Ltd.
2023
Article
PeerReviewed
application/pdf
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81729/1/ajbr230154.pdf
https://doi.org/10.14707/ajbr.230154
Hiram, Ting, Turner, Daniel, Tan, Kim-Lim, Tan, Sook Rei, Wong, Munwai, and Gong, Jiankun (2023) Less is More? Review and Recommendations for Qualitative Sampling Strategy using the S.C.A.D.E Approach. Asian Journal of Business Research, 13 (3).
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/81729/
open