Artwork by Tamika Worrell and Midjourney
Australian Studies has long been concerned with histories and stories about human experiences focusing on issues of settler colonisation, conflict, violence, resistance, resilience, agency, and justice. The 2025 InASA conference continues to focus on these vital issues but turns also to consider Australians’ formation by, and engagement with, the more-than-human world. Australian Studies is experiencing rapid transformation in the 21st century as new biopolitical challenges emerge with climate change and concomitant environmental and ecological concerns, and as artificial intelligence impacts and transforms social, cultural, economic, and political life. New understandings, inspirations, and challenges emerge not only about the peoples across Australia, but also the continent’s more-than-human entities, including animals, plants, landscapes, ecologies, and technologies, among others.
The 2025 InASA conference aims to foster interdisciplinary and cross-cultural dialogues on Critical Indigenous Studies, history, literature, culture, creative arts, politics, media, sociology, anthropology, geography, ecology, and other disciplines that engage with human experiences and/or more-than-human worlds.
We welcome proposals for individual papers, 3 member panels, or 4-5 member roundtables for plenary sessions, that engage with the conference theme from diverse disciplines, perspectives, and methodologies. For more information visit the Call for Paper’s page.
The conference program will be available in the coming months. Stay tuned!
Registrations open | Wednesday 31 July 2024 |
Call for paper submission closes | Monday 4 November 2024 |
Decisions will be shared with applicants | Before Friday 15 November 2024 |
Early bird closes | AEDT 11.59pm Tuesday 31 December 2024 |
All registrations close | AEDT 11.59pm Wednesday 29 January 2025 |
This event is brought to (YOU)us by:
Wallumattagal Campus
Balaclava Road
Macquarie University NSW 2109
Angel Place
Level 24, 123 Pitt Street
Sydney NSW 2000
We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which Macquarie University stands - the Wallumattagal Clan of the Dharug Nation - whose cultures and customs have nurtured, and continue to nurture, this land since time immemorial. We pay our respects to the Elders, past and present.
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