Archive
The notion of what it means to be different, and the question of how we know we are different, invites us to consider statistical method and its implications for our society, for only in the context of what is normal can an individual be assessed as different. Mathematically, it would appear that the relationship between an individual and a society composed of individuals is by no means straightforward, a subtlety increasingly lost on those citizens who, armed with degrees in the social sciences, emerge from our tertiary institutions to study, rehabilitate, and edify us.
... (read more)Dispossession: Black Australians and white invaders by Henry Reynolds
by Michael Sturma •
Encounters in Place: Outsiders and Aboriginal Australians by D.J. Mulvaney
by Deborah Bird Rose •
The Critic as Advocate: Selected essays 1941–1988 by Bernard Smith
by Heather Johnson •