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Creative Documentary Practice: Internalising the Systems Model Of
Creative Documentary Practice: Internalising the Systems Model of Creativity through documentary video and online practice Susan Kerrigan BArts (Comm Studies) (UoN), Grad Cert Practice Tertiary Teaching (UoN) A creative work thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Communication & Media Arts University of Newcastle, June 2011 Declarations: Declaration 1: I hereby certify that some elements of the creative work Using Fort Scratchley which has been submitted as part of this creative PhD thesis were created in collaboration with another researcher, Kathy Freeman, who worked on the video documentary as the editor. Kathy was working at the Honours level from 2005 to 2006 and I was her Honours Supervisor. Kathy was researching the creative role of the editor, her Honours research was titled Expanding and Contracting the role of the Editor: Investigating the role of the editor in the collaborative and creative procedure of documentary film production (Freeman, 2007). While Kathy’s work dovetailed closely with my own work there was a clear separation of responsibilities and research imperatives, as each of our research topics was focussed on the creative aspects of our different production crew roles. Declaration 2: I hereby certify that the work embodied in this thesis contains one journal publication and three peer-reviewed published conference papers authored by myself. Kerrigan, S. (2010) Creative Practice Research: Interrogating creativity theories through documentary practice TEXT October 2010. Retrieved 4 November, 2010, Special Issue Number 8, from http://www.textjournal.com.au/speciss/issue8/content.htm Kerrigan, S. (2009) Applying creativity theories to a documentary filmmaker’s practice Aspera 2009 - Beyond the Screen: Retrieved from http://www.aspera.org.au/node/40 Kerrigan, S. -
Study-Newcastle-Lonely-Planet.Pdf
Produced by Lonely Planet for Study NT NewcastleDO VIBRAne of Lonely Planet’s Top 10 Cities in Best in Travel 2011 N CREATIVE A LANET Y P ’S EL TO N P O 1 L 0 F TOP C O I T TOP E I E N S O 10 CITY I N 10 CITY ! 1 B 1 E 0 S 2 2011 T L I E N V T A R 2011 PLANE LY T’S NE T O O P L F 1 O 0 C E I N T I O E S ! 1 I 1 N 0 B 2 E L S E T V I A N R T LANET Y P ’S EL TO N P O 1 TOP L 0 F TOP C O I T 10 CITY E I E N S O 10 CITY I N ! 2011 1 B 1 E 0 LAN S P E 2 Y T 2011 T L L ’ I S E N E V T A R N T O O P L F 1 O 0 C E I N T I O E S ! 1 I 1 N 0 B 2 E L S E T V I A N R T E W RE HANI AKBAR st VER I » Age 22 from Saudi Arabia OL » From Saudi Arabia » Studying an International Foundation program What do you think of Newcastle? It’s so beautiful, not big not small, nice. It’s a good place for students who are studying, with a lot of nice people. -
Hunter Economic Zone
Issue No. 3/14 June 2014 The Club aims to: • encourage and further the study and conservation of Australian birds and their habitat • encourage bird observing as a leisure-time activity A Black-necked Stork pair at Hexham Swamp performing a spectacular “Up-down” display before chasing away the interloper - in this case a young female - Rod Warnock CONTENTS President’s Column 2 Conservation Issues New Members 2 Hunter Economic Zone 9 Club Activity Reports Macquarie Island now pest-free 10 Glenrock and Redhead 2 Powling Street Wetlands, Port Fairy 11 Borah TSR near Barraba 3 Bird Articles Tocal Field Days 4 Plankton makes scents for seabirds 12 Tocal Agricultural College 4 Superb Fairy-wrens sing to their chicks Rufous Scrub-bird Monitoring 5 before birth 13 Future Activity - BirdLife Seminar 5 BirdLife Australia News 13 Birding Features Birding Feature Hunter Striated Pardalote Subspecies ID 6 Trans-Tasman Birding Links since 2000 14 Trials of Photography - Oystercatchers 7 Club Night & Hunterbirding Observations 15 Featured Birdwatching Site - Allyn River 8 Club Activities June to August 18 Please send Newsletter articles direct to the Editor, HBOC postal address: Liz Crawford at: [email protected] PO Box 24 New Lambton NSW 2305 Deadline for the next edition - 31 July 2014 Website: www.hboc.org.au President’s Column I’ve just been on the phone to a lady that lives in Sydney was here for a few days visiting the area, talking to club and is part of a birdwatching group of friends that are members and attending our May club meeting. -
Sailing Program 2018-2019
SAILINGSAILING PROGRAMPROGRAM 2018-20192015-2016 EMERGENCY GUIDE FOR SYDNEY HARBOUR AMBULANCE – POLICE – FIRE: 000 OR 112 CYCA Reception: (02) 8292 7800 Sailing Office: (02) 8292 7870 MV Offshore: 0417 282 172 Marine Rescue Sydney: (02) 9450 2468 Water Police (02) 9320 7499 RMS /Maritime: 13 12 36 Rose Bay Police Station: (02) 9362 6399 EMERGENCY Manly Ferry Wharf Double Bay Ferry Wharf 77 Bay Street, Double Bay, VHF 16 Belgrave Street and West Esplanade, Manly, 2095 2028 Race Watson’s Bay Ferry Wharf Royal Sydney Yacht 1 Military Road, Watsons Bay, Committee Squadron 2030 33 Peel Street, Kirribilli, 2061 VHF 72 Rose Bay Ferry Wharf Taronga Zoo Ferry Wharf Lyne Park, Nr New South Athol Street, Mosman, 2088 Head Road, Rose Bay, 2029 Cruising Yacht Club of Australia 1 New Beach Road, Darling Point, NSW 2027 Telephone: (02) 8292 7800 Email: [email protected] ABN: 28 000 116 423 Race Results: Internet: www.cyca.com.au SAILING PROGRAM 2018-2019 Board of Directors Flag Officers Commodore PAUL BILLINGHAM Vice Commodore NOEL CORNISH Rear-Commodore Rear-Commodore SAM HAYNES JANEY TRELEAVEN Treasurer ARTHUR LANE Directors JUSTIN ATKINSON DAVID JACOBS BRADSHAW KELLETT LEANDER KLOHS Chief Executive Officer KAREN GREGA Cover Photo: Patrice Photo courtesy of Rolex 1 Cruising Yacht Club of Australia Sailing Office & Youth Sailing Academy Sailing Manager – Justine Kirkjian Assistant Sailing Manager – Stephen Craig YSA Supervisor – Pam Scrivenor YSA Coach – Jordan Reece Marina Tender Driver – 0418 611 672 Tender Hours – Mon-Fri (07:30-16:00), Sat-Sun -
Coal River Tourism Project Coal River Historic Site Stage 1
Coal River Tourism Project Coal River Historic Site Stage One HHHiiissstttooorrriiicccaaalll AAAnnnaaalllyyysssiiisss ooofff SSSiiittteeesss aaannnddd RRReeelllaaattteeeddd HHHiiissstttooorrriiicccaaalll aaannnddd CCCuuullltttuuurrraaalll IIInnnfffrrraaassstttrrruuuccctttuuurrreee by Cynthia Hunter, August 2001 Watercolour by unknown artist, c. 1820 Original held at Dixson Library, State Library of New South Wales. This illustration encapsulated principal elements of the Coal River Historic Site. The ocean, Nobbys and South Head, the coal seams, the convicts at work quarrying building the breakwater wall and attending to the communication signals, the river, the foreshore, in all, the genesis of a vital commercial city and one of the world’s great ports of the modern industrial age. COAL RIVER HISTORIC SITE 1 Coal River Tourism Project Coal River Historic Site Stage 1 Prepared by CCCyyynnnttthhhiiiaaa HHHuuunnnttteeerrr August 2001 CCCooonnnttteeennnttt Provide a Statement of Significance in a National and State context which qualifies the connected cultural significance of the Coal River sites and the Newcastle East precinct ~ Section 1 Identify key sites and secondary sites ~ Section 2 Identify and link areas, sites and relics ~ Section 3 Propose a conceptual framework for an interpretation plan for Stage 3 ~ Section 4 Advise on likelihood and location of the tunnels based on historical research ~ Section 5 COAL RIVER HISTORIC SITE 2 Coal River Time Line 1796 Informal accounts reach Sydney of the reserves of coal at ‘Coal River’. 1797 Lt Shortland and his crew enter Coal River and confirm the coal resources 1801 Formal identification of the great potential of the coal reserves and the river and first and brief attempt to set up a coal mining camp. -
Australian Lighthouses by Ian Arthur
1 Australian Lighthouses By Ian Arthur The idea of writing an article on lighthouses for ASHET News originated in my reading a paper in the journal of the Society for the History of Technology, based in America. The paper by Michael Brian Schiffer is titled The Electric Lighthouse in the Nineteenth Century: Aid to Navigation and Political Technology and is published in the Volume 46 Number 2, April 2005 edition of the Society’s journal Technology and Culture. The paper mentions that the second Macquarie Lighthouse in Australia, when it opened in 1883, had the most powerful electric light in the world. This led me to read more about lighthouses in Australia, and this article is the result. It is timely, since the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA), responsible for providing aids to ocean and coastal navigation in Australia, celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2015, and 2018 will be the 200th anniversary of the opening of the first Australian lighthouse, the Macquarie Lighthouse on South Head in Sydney. The earliest lighthouses The first authenticated record of a lighthouse is that of the Pharos of Alex- andria, one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world. It was built around 280 BC on the island of Pharos at the entrance to the port of Alexandria. It was large even by modern standards, around 120 m high, built of stone faced with marble. At the top was a wood fired beacon that could be seen under good conditions 30 miles out to sea. The Romans and the Phoenicians built many fire-beacons and a few lighthouses wherever they traded regularly, at locations reaching from the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea to the Atlantic coast of Spain and to Britain. -
Independent Investigation Into the Collision Between the Indian
ATSB TRANSPORT SAFETY INVESTIGATION REPORT Marine Occurrence Investigation No. 210 Final Independent investigation into the collision between the Indian registered bulk carrier Goa and the Australian sailing vessel Marie Chocolat off the port of Newcastle, NSW 19 February 2005 ATSB TRANSPORT SAFETY INVESTIGATION REPORT Marine Occurrence Investigation No. 210 Independent investigation into the collision between the Indian registered bulk carrier Goa and the Australian sailing vessel Marie Chocolat off the port of Newcastle, NSW 19 February 2005 Released in accordance with section 25 of the Transport Safety Investigation Act 2003 Published by: Australian Transport Safety Bureau Postal address: PO Box 967, Civic Square ACT 2608 Office location: 15 Mort Street, Canberra City, Australian Capital Territory Telephone: 1800 621 372; from overseas + 61 2 6274 6590 Accident and serious incident notification: 1800 011 034 (24 hours) Facsimile: 02 6274 6474; from overseas + 61 2 6274 6474 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: www.atsb.gov.au © Commonwealth of Australia 2006. This work is copyright. In the interests of enhancing the value of the information contained in this publication you may copy, download, display, print, reproduce and distribute this material in unaltered form (retaining this notice). However, copyright in the material obtained from non-Commonwealth agencies, private individuals or organisations. Where you want to use their material you will need to contact them directly. Subject to the provision of the Copyright Act 1968, you -
2018 HBOC Bird Report
HUNTER REGION OF NEW SOUTH WALES Annual Bird Report Number 26 (2018) © Produced by Hunter Bird Observers Club Inc The Hunter Bird Observers Club Inc. (HBOC) produces these annual records of the birds of the Hunter Region of NSW. The aims of HBOC are: • To encourage and further the study and conservation of Australian birds and their habitat. • To encourage bird observing as a leisure time activity. HBOC holds monthly meetings with guest speakers on bird related topics, conducts regular surveys within the Hunter Region, and organises mid-week and weekend outings and occasional camps on long weekends. The range of activities is designed to suit beginners and more experienced birdwatchers equally. All members receive a regular newsletter and are able to borrow without charge from a comprehensive range of books and CDs about Australian and world birdlife. Visit www.hboc.org.au for more details. Membership categories are Single, Family and Junior, and applications for membership are welcomed at any time. Copies of this report, at $15.00 each, may be obtained from: The Secretary Hunter Bird Observers Club Inc. P.O. Box 24 New Lambton NSW 2305 Email: [email protected] Front cover: Rainbow Bee-eater (Merops ornatus) by Trevor Murray Back cover: Little Lorikeet (Glossopsitta pusilla) by Dick Jenkin Date of Issue: 31 March 2020 ISSN: 1322-5332 Managing Editor: Dan Williams Design layout: Rob Kyte at Conservation Matters 0420 821460 Citation: Williams, D. (Ed.) (2019). Hunter Region Annual Bird Report Number 26 (2018), Hunter Bird Observers Club Inc., New Lambton, Australia © Hunter Bird Observers Club Inc Financial assistance from Newcastle Coal Infrastructure Group (NCIG) for printing this Report is gratefully acknowledged. -
Makers Tech Proposal Rejected 9,4:3 Maitland A,L,P. Chief Leaves Party 9
N,H, INDEX 56. 1981 LIBERAL PARTY LIDDELL POWER STATICW (Con't) Pledge to help blacks 26.3:4 Problems not result of design fault : makers A fitting tribute (Leader) 27.3:2 27,11:5 Anti apartheid policy backed 30.3:4 Liddell faults 'in design' 3,12:11 Liberal Branch ousts Scott 24.4:1 Liddell plant repair soon 18.12:5 Liberal denies stacked meeting 25.4:1 Libs pick Toms for election 11.^:3 LINGARD HOSPITAL Young libs want 2 way equality 12.5:6 Lib accuses branches 12.5:7 The Lingard extensions (Leader) 14.1:2 Hamer coming home to fight for survival 25.5:1 Lingard plans study 28,1:3 Hamer must resign : Wilkes 25.5:3 $1.5 m. hospital plan 3.2:3 A government lurches on (Leader) 26.5:2 St te Libs meet over leadership 26.5:3 LIQUID PETROLEUM GAS Fraser calls meeting on whip 26,5:3 Mason fights back to hold his job 27,5:1 Chos follows L.P.G, leak 11,2:17 N,S,W, Liberals quandary (Leader) 27.5:2 Japanese sign $250 m, deal for Cooper Basin Libs lobby for new leader 28.5:1 L,P,G. 26,8:14 The Liberal switch (Leader) 28.5:2 Close ranks is P.M.'s call 28.5:3 LITERATURE Third man joins leadership race 29,5:3 Biography prize 23,1:8 A horrific week for the liberals (Leader) 30.5:2 Group are publishers in their own write 18,3:9 Unity call seeks to galvanise liberal dissenters Costume parade celebrates Book Week 15.7:5 1.6:1 Author, 87, wins award 8.9:17 Prospect dims for liberal deputy hopes 1.6:3 The parental guide to weekend survival 2,12:25 The liberal team (Leader) 2,6:2 Lib leader hits at W.A., Qld 8.6:5 LOCAL GOVERNMENT Redistribution plans squashed -
Hunter Estates a Comparative Heritage
HUNTER ESTATES A Comparative Heritage Study of pre 1850s Homestead Complexes in the Hunter Region Volume I: Historical Context and Survey of Sites © Copyright State of NSW and the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage. This report has been prepared by Clive Lucas, Stapleton and Partners Pty Ltd for the Heritage Council of NSW, Locked Bag 5020, Parramatta, NSW 2124. With the exception of photographs, the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage and State of NSW are pleased to allow this material to be reproduced in whole or in part for educational and non- commercial use, provided the meaning is unchanged and its source, publisher and authorship are acknowledged. Specific permission is required for the reproduction of photographs. The Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) has compiled this publication in good faith, exercising all due care and attention. No representation is made about the accuracy, completeness or suitability of the information in this publication for any particular purpose. OEH shall not be liable for any damage which may occur to any person or organisation taking action or not on the basis of this publication. Readers should seek appropriate advice when applying the information to their specific needs. Published by: Office of Environment and Heritage on behalf of the Heritage Council of New South Wales 59 Goulburn Street PO Box A290 Sydney South 1232 Phone: (02) 9995 5000 (switchboard) Phone: 131 555 (environment information and publications requests) Phone: 1300 361 967 (national parks, climate change and energy -
Newcastle City Wide Heritage Study
NEWCASTLE CITY WIDE HERITAGE STUDY THEMATIC HISTORY Extract from Newcastle City Wide Heritage Study by Suters Architects, prepared on behalf of Newcastle City Council 1996/7 digitised 2007 Newcastle City Wide Heritage Study 1996/1997 Thematic History Digitised 2007 1.1 INTRODUCTION .........................................................................................1 1.1.2 The Establishment of Newcastle............................................................1 1.2 NEWCASTLE’S FOUR QUARTERS..........................................................2 1.2.1 The First Quarter – Convictism and Coal..............................................2 1.2.1.1 The Government Buildings...................................................................3 1.2.1.2 The Private Buildings ...........................................................................3 1.2.1.3 The Town Stagnates..............................................................................3 1.2.1.4 Australian Agricultural Company Stimulates Coal mining...................4 1.2.1.5 The State of the Town to 1846..............................................................4 1.2.2 The Second Quarter – The Railways and Coal..........................................5 1.2.2.1 The Port Develops.................................................................................5 1.2.2.2 Towns in the Hinterland........................................................................6 1.2.2.3 Local Government makes it debut ........................................................6 1.2.3 -
'Mission Impossible': Aboriginal Survival Before, During and After The
1 ‘Mission Impossible’: Aboriginal survival before, during and after the Aboriginal Protection Era Lawrence Joseph Perry BEd(AdultEd) Thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the Wollotuka Institute of Aboriginal Studies. Academic Division-University of Newcastle, Australia. December 2013 2 Declaration The thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other tertiary institution and, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference has been made in the text. I give consent to the final version of my thesis being made available worldwide when deposited in the University’s Digital Repository, subject to the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. Signed……………………………………… 3 Acknowledgements To my Worimi Ancestors who walked the traditional path, who cared for our land and our people, for all those who endured the many hardships throughout colonisation and those Worimi elders with us today: I acknowledge you and pay my respect. Thank you for leaving your deep footprints in history to make our journey that little bit easier. There are a number of people that I wish to thank who have assisted and inspired me along the path to the completion to this thesis. First of all, I would like to express my gratitude to my supervisors Professor John Maynard and Professor John Ramsland for their many hours of reading the thesis, making constructive comments, insightful remarks and giving informed advice. Their academic knowledge and experience have supported and helped guide me throughout the writing process.