| The Cultural Studies Association of Australia
was established in 1992, and in 2002 became the Cultural
Studies Association of Australasia. The broad aims of the
Association are to develop the study, teaching and public profile
of Cultural Studies throughout Australasia.
The Association’s work centres upon an annual conference,
which attracts some 150-250 academics from across Australia, New
Zealand and other parts of the world. Since 2000, we have discussed
Ute Culture in Melbourne, Everyday Transformations
in Perth, On the Beach in Brisbane, Culture
Incorporated in Christchurch, What's Left of Theory?
in Hobart, Culture Fix in Sydney, and, just last
year, Unaustralia in Canberra. In other words,
the conference is a themed event, and is held in a different city
each year. The attempt to locate one’s research in relation
to another’s theme, and the general disorientation that travel
induces, can have powerfully interpellative, disruptive and creative
outcomes. That’s one set of reasons to attend the conference.
Another is that the Association provides an umbrella home to a broad
range of scholars working at the cross-disciplinary and cutting
edges of humanities scholarship: Queer Studies, Postcolonial Studies,
Film and Television, Feminism, New Media, Poetry, Marxism, Gender
Studies, Fictocriticism, Philosophy, Music, Internet Studies, Creative
Industries, Psychoanalysis, Creative Activism, Cyberculture, Body
Modifications and more are all encountered, in dialogue, disagreement
and debate. The Association is just this conversation. That is to
say, it’s an unorthodox one.
As well as staging some of Australia’s most interesting and
cross-disciplinary humanities conferences, the CSAA hosts a range
of on-line and print activities through the year. Many scholars,
both in the organization and outside it, avail themselves of the
Association’s e-mail list, the CSAA-Forum, which features
up-to-the-minute postings on current events, questions, interventions,
arguments. Click the Discussion button above to access the subscription
page. The Association sends its members a biannual Newsletter, which
offers news, calls for papers and writing by Cultural Studies scholars
on topical issues. Members also receive a subscription the Association's
affiliated journal Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies,
which comes out four times a year. Then there are the various services
performed by this web-site, including: the register of abstracts
of recent Cultural Studies theses, some with links to the Australian
Digital Theses program; the listings of current funded projects
in Cultural Studies and recently published books by our members,
and the on-line database where members can list their details, research
interests, projects, publications and weblinks.
You can join the Association by clicking the button on the left,
or simply by attending the Annual Conference, which includes membership
dues in its registration fees. Join in.
Paul Magee
President, Cultural Studies Association of Australasia
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