際際滷shows by User: davegearl / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: davegearl / Sun, 08 Sep 2013 22:10:10 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: davegearl NSW History Week: A Picture and A Thousand Words /slideshow/nsw-history-week-a-picture-and-a-thousand-words/26009448 nswhistoryweekapictureandathousandwords-130908221010-
Is a picture really worth a thousand words? Help decide over a cocktail in an award-winning small bar at this unique event. See (and hear) historians Matthew Allen, Hannah Forsyth, Dave Earl and Nick Irving discuss the context and creation of some captivating historical images. In just ten minutes, the speakers will delve into the histories of four fascinating, but largely unexplored subjects: Norman Lindsays women, the Vietnam moratoriums, the role of alcohol in Australian society, and the creation of farm colonies for subnormal boys and men.]]>

Is a picture really worth a thousand words? Help decide over a cocktail in an award-winning small bar at this unique event. See (and hear) historians Matthew Allen, Hannah Forsyth, Dave Earl and Nick Irving discuss the context and creation of some captivating historical images. In just ten minutes, the speakers will delve into the histories of four fascinating, but largely unexplored subjects: Norman Lindsays women, the Vietnam moratoriums, the role of alcohol in Australian society, and the creation of farm colonies for subnormal boys and men.]]>
Sun, 08 Sep 2013 22:10:10 GMT /slideshow/nsw-history-week-a-picture-and-a-thousand-words/26009448 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) NSW History Week: A Picture and A Thousand Words davegearl Is a picture really worth a thousand words? Help decide over a cocktail in an award-winning small bar at this unique event. See (and hear) historians Matthew Allen, Hannah Forsyth, Dave Earl and Nick Irving discuss the context and creation of some captivating historical images. In just ten minutes, the speakers will delve into the histories of four fascinating, but largely unexplored subjects: Norman Lindsays women, the Vietnam moratoriums, the role of alcohol in Australian society, and the creation of farm colonies for subnormal boys and men. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/nswhistoryweekapictureandathousandwords-130908221010--thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Is a picture really worth a thousand words? Help decide over a cocktail in an award-winning small bar at this unique event. See (and hear) historians Matthew Allen, Hannah Forsyth, Dave Earl and Nick Irving discuss the context and creation of some captivating historical images. In just ten minutes, the speakers will delve into the histories of four fascinating, but largely unexplored subjects: Norman Lindsays women, the Vietnam moratoriums, the role of alcohol in Australian society, and the creation of farm colonies for subnormal boys and men.
NSW History Week: A Picture and A Thousand Words from Dave Earl
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The Sad (?) Story of John Carey Guest, Public talk delivered to the RAHS, 17th April, 2013 /davegearl/2013-04-whats-hot-in-history-final 2013-04whatshotinhistory-final-130417001545-phpapp02
A podcast of this talk is available on the RAHS website, www.rahs.org.au]]>

A podcast of this talk is available on the RAHS website, www.rahs.org.au]]>
Wed, 17 Apr 2013 00:15:44 GMT /davegearl/2013-04-whats-hot-in-history-final davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) The Sad (?) Story of John Carey Guest, Public talk delivered to the RAHS, 17th April, 2013 davegearl A podcast of this talk is available on the RAHS website, www.rahs.org.au <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013-04whatshotinhistory-final-130417001545-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A podcast of this talk is available on the RAHS website, www.rahs.org.au
The Sad (?) Story of John Carey Guest, Public talk delivered to the RAHS, 17th April, 2013 from Dave Earl
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The Coming Of White Australia /davegearl/2013-0315-coming-of-white-australia 2013-03-15comingofwhiteaustralia-130320165348-phpapp01
Lecture delivered at the University of Sydney, 21st March, 2013. References available at http://davegearl.com First 2 minutes of audio missing. Chloe Okoli (with an L) is the correct spelling.]]>

Lecture delivered at the University of Sydney, 21st March, 2013. References available at http://davegearl.com First 2 minutes of audio missing. Chloe Okoli (with an L) is the correct spelling.]]>
Wed, 20 Mar 2013 16:53:48 GMT /davegearl/2013-0315-coming-of-white-australia davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) The Coming Of White Australia davegearl Lecture delivered at the University of Sydney, 21st March, 2013. References available at http://davegearl.com First 2 minutes of audio missing. Chloe Okoli (with an L) is the correct spelling. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013-03-15comingofwhiteaustralia-130320165348-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Lecture delivered at the University of Sydney, 21st March, 2013. References available at http://davegearl.com First 2 minutes of audio missing. Chloe Okoli (with an L) is the correct spelling.
The Coming Of White Australia from Dave Earl
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Twitter and HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution /slideshow/twitter-and-hsty2616-the-human-rights-revolution/17145514 twitterpowerpoint-130312174639-phpapp01
Twitter resources for HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution, Sydney University, Semester 1 2013.]]>

Twitter resources for HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution, Sydney University, Semester 1 2013.]]>
Tue, 12 Mar 2013 17:46:39 GMT /slideshow/twitter-and-hsty2616-the-human-rights-revolution/17145514 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) Twitter and HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution davegearl Twitter resources for HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution, Sydney University, Semester 1 2013. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/twitterpowerpoint-130312174639-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Twitter resources for HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution, Sydney University, Semester 1 2013.
Twitter and HSTY2616 The Human Rights Revolution from Dave Earl
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Habilitating the Retarded: Why sheltered workshops for 'mentally retarded' Australians became 'terminal', 1945-1970. AHA, 10th July 2012 /slideshow/habilitating-the-retarded-why-sheltered-workshops-for-mentally-retarded-australians-became-terminal-19451970-aha-10th-july-2012/13579644 habilitatingtheretarded-120708223742-phpapp02
The New Disability History, which seeks to trace the changing meanings attached to impairments over time, has alerted us to the contingent and protean nature of disabilities, and exposed the fuzzy boundaries between embodied impairments and culturally constructed disablements. The borderlands of disabilities are often diffuse, and different groups of individuals have moved within or through them over time. In the decades immediately following the Second World, the group of classifications we now call 'intellectual disabilities' was in a state of flux. Australian parents with 'mentally retarded' youngsters had emerged as a new political force, organising themselves into large, influential voluntary bodies, and driving particularly rapid shifts in both popular and scientific understandings of who constituted the 'mentally retarded' group, and the needs, abilities and potentialities of its constituents. A key concern of the parent organisations was shifting public perceptions of their children's place in the national community, and ability to participate in it: were their offspring 'retarded citizens', able to play a genuine part in society, or were they something less, requiring sympathetic care and charity, but segregation from the broader world? The answer to these and similar questions dictated the types of facilities voluntary organisations established for their 'children,' and the outcomes expected from them. Using 'sheltered workshops' as a case study, I trace the genealogies of 'occupation therapy,' 'rehabilitation' and 'special education' in Australia, examine the discourses deployed by voluntary organisations when discussing the establishment of facilities for 'retarded' Australians, and assess the success of these establishments in transforming the position of 'retarded' people in our community.]]>

The New Disability History, which seeks to trace the changing meanings attached to impairments over time, has alerted us to the contingent and protean nature of disabilities, and exposed the fuzzy boundaries between embodied impairments and culturally constructed disablements. The borderlands of disabilities are often diffuse, and different groups of individuals have moved within or through them over time. In the decades immediately following the Second World, the group of classifications we now call 'intellectual disabilities' was in a state of flux. Australian parents with 'mentally retarded' youngsters had emerged as a new political force, organising themselves into large, influential voluntary bodies, and driving particularly rapid shifts in both popular and scientific understandings of who constituted the 'mentally retarded' group, and the needs, abilities and potentialities of its constituents. A key concern of the parent organisations was shifting public perceptions of their children's place in the national community, and ability to participate in it: were their offspring 'retarded citizens', able to play a genuine part in society, or were they something less, requiring sympathetic care and charity, but segregation from the broader world? The answer to these and similar questions dictated the types of facilities voluntary organisations established for their 'children,' and the outcomes expected from them. Using 'sheltered workshops' as a case study, I trace the genealogies of 'occupation therapy,' 'rehabilitation' and 'special education' in Australia, examine the discourses deployed by voluntary organisations when discussing the establishment of facilities for 'retarded' Australians, and assess the success of these establishments in transforming the position of 'retarded' people in our community.]]>
Sun, 08 Jul 2012 22:37:40 GMT /slideshow/habilitating-the-retarded-why-sheltered-workshops-for-mentally-retarded-australians-became-terminal-19451970-aha-10th-july-2012/13579644 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) Habilitating the Retarded: Why sheltered workshops for 'mentally retarded' Australians became 'terminal', 1945-1970. AHA, 10th July 2012 davegearl The New Disability History, which seeks to trace the changing meanings attached to impairments over time, has alerted us to the contingent and protean nature of disabilities, and exposed the fuzzy boundaries between embodied impairments and culturally constructed disablements. The borderlands of disabilities are often diffuse, and different groups of individuals have moved within or through them over time. In the decades immediately following the Second World, the group of classifications we now call 'intellectual disabilities' was in a state of flux. Australian parents with 'mentally retarded' youngsters had emerged as a new political force, organising themselves into large, influential voluntary bodies, and driving particularly rapid shifts in both popular and scientific understandings of who constituted the 'mentally retarded' group, and the needs, abilities and potentialities of its constituents. A key concern of the parent organisations was shifting public perceptions of their children's place in the national community, and ability to participate in it: were their offspring 'retarded citizens', able to play a genuine part in society, or were they something less, requiring sympathetic care and charity, but segregation from the broader world? The answer to these and similar questions dictated the types of facilities voluntary organisations established for their 'children,' and the outcomes expected from them. Using 'sheltered workshops' as a case study, I trace the genealogies of 'occupation therapy,' 'rehabilitation' and 'special education' in Australia, examine the discourses deployed by voluntary organisations when discussing the establishment of facilities for 'retarded' Australians, and assess the success of these establishments in transforming the position of 'retarded' people in our community. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/habilitatingtheretarded-120708223742-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The New Disability History, which seeks to trace the changing meanings attached to impairments over time, has alerted us to the contingent and protean nature of disabilities, and exposed the fuzzy boundaries between embodied impairments and culturally constructed disablements. The borderlands of disabilities are often diffuse, and different groups of individuals have moved within or through them over time. In the decades immediately following the Second World, the group of classifications we now call &#39;intellectual disabilities&#39; was in a state of flux. Australian parents with &#39;mentally retarded&#39; youngsters had emerged as a new political force, organising themselves into large, influential voluntary bodies, and driving particularly rapid shifts in both popular and scientific understandings of who constituted the &#39;mentally retarded&#39; group, and the needs, abilities and potentialities of its constituents. A key concern of the parent organisations was shifting public perceptions of their children&#39;s place in the national community, and ability to participate in it: were their offspring &#39;retarded citizens&#39;, able to play a genuine part in society, or were they something less, requiring sympathetic care and charity, but segregation from the broader world? The answer to these and similar questions dictated the types of facilities voluntary organisations established for their &#39;children,&#39; and the outcomes expected from them. Using &#39;sheltered workshops&#39; as a case study, I trace the genealogies of &#39;occupation therapy,&#39; &#39;rehabilitation&#39; and &#39;special education&#39; in Australia, examine the discourses deployed by voluntary organisations when discussing the establishment of facilities for &#39;retarded&#39; Australians, and assess the success of these establishments in transforming the position of &#39;retarded&#39; people in our community.
Habilitating the Retarded: Why sheltered workshops for 'mentally retarded' Australians became 'terminal', 1945-1970. AHA, 10th July 2012 from Dave Earl
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HSTY2614 Suburban Domesticty /slideshow/hsty2614-suburban-domesticty/12565600 daveearlsuburbandomesticityslideshowtrimmed-120416201158-phpapp02
17th April 2012]]>

17th April 2012]]>
Mon, 16 Apr 2012 20:11:54 GMT /slideshow/hsty2614-suburban-domesticty/12565600 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) HSTY2614 Suburban Domesticty davegearl 17th April 2012 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/daveearlsuburbandomesticityslideshowtrimmed-120416201158-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 17th April 2012
HSTY2614 Suburban Domesticty from Dave Earl
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Dave Earl AHA Conference 2011 /slideshow/dave-earl-aha-conference-2011/11396302 daveearlahaconference2011-slideshare-120202215523-phpapp02
"Our Tasmanian Secretary laments that some teachers think all their pupils feeble-minded" Eugenics, rural culture and conceptions of intellectual disability in Australia, 1911 1928'. Paper presented to the Australian Historical Association Conference, Launceston, July 2011.]]>

"Our Tasmanian Secretary laments that some teachers think all their pupils feeble-minded" Eugenics, rural culture and conceptions of intellectual disability in Australia, 1911 1928'. Paper presented to the Australian Historical Association Conference, Launceston, July 2011.]]>
Thu, 02 Feb 2012 21:55:22 GMT /slideshow/dave-earl-aha-conference-2011/11396302 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) Dave Earl AHA Conference 2011 davegearl "Our Tasmanian Secretary laments that some teachers think all their pupils feeble-minded" Eugenics, rural culture and conceptions of intellectual disability in Australia, 1911 1928'. Paper presented to the Australian Historical Association Conference, Launceston, July 2011. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/daveearlahaconference2011-slideshare-120202215523-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> &quot;Our Tasmanian Secretary laments that some teachers think all their pupils feeble-minded&quot; Eugenics, rural culture and conceptions of intellectual disability in Australia, 1911 1928&#39;. Paper presented to the Australian Historical Association Conference, Launceston, July 2011.
Dave Earl AHA Conference 2011 from Dave Earl
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Dave Earl - Australasian Welfare History Workshop 2011 /slideshow/dave-earl-australasian-welfare-history-workshop-2011/11396265 daveearlaswhwslideshow-slideshare-120202214901-phpapp02
'The Association for Aiding Educable Sub-Normal Children Only:' Communities, power, and categories of disability in Australian voluntary organisations for disabled children, 1950 1965." Paper presented to the Australasian Welfare History Workshop, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand, November 2011.]]>

'The Association for Aiding Educable Sub-Normal Children Only:' Communities, power, and categories of disability in Australian voluntary organisations for disabled children, 1950 1965." Paper presented to the Australasian Welfare History Workshop, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand, November 2011.]]>
Thu, 02 Feb 2012 21:48:57 GMT /slideshow/dave-earl-australasian-welfare-history-workshop-2011/11396265 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) Dave Earl - Australasian Welfare History Workshop 2011 davegearl 'The Association for Aiding Educable Sub-Normal Children Only:' Communities, power, and categories of disability in Australian voluntary organisations for disabled children, 1950 1965." Paper presented to the Australasian Welfare History Workshop, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand, November 2011. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/daveearlaswhwslideshow-slideshare-120202214901-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> &#39;The Association for Aiding Educable Sub-Normal Children Only:&#39; Communities, power, and categories of disability in Australian voluntary organisations for disabled children, 1950 1965.&quot; Paper presented to the Australasian Welfare History Workshop, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand, November 2011.
Dave Earl - Australasian Welfare History Workshop 2011 from Dave Earl
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Dave Earl - The Rise of the Nuclear Family /slideshow/dave-earl-the-rise-of-the-nuclear-family/10977258 daveearlfinal-120111193600-phpapp01
際際滷show to accompany Sydney Summer School Guest Lecture, HSTY2614, "Australian Social History." 11am, 12th January 2011. Full list of references for this lecture is available at http://daveearl.net. Copyright of the images included belongs to the relevant libraries and archives.]]>

際際滷show to accompany Sydney Summer School Guest Lecture, HSTY2614, "Australian Social History." 11am, 12th January 2011. Full list of references for this lecture is available at http://daveearl.net. Copyright of the images included belongs to the relevant libraries and archives.]]>
Wed, 11 Jan 2012 19:35:57 GMT /slideshow/dave-earl-the-rise-of-the-nuclear-family/10977258 davegearl@slideshare.net(davegearl) Dave Earl - The Rise of the Nuclear Family davegearl 際際滷show to accompany Sydney Summer School Guest Lecture, HSTY2614, "Australian Social History." 11am, 12th January 2011. Full list of references for this lecture is available at http://daveearl.net. Copyright of the images included belongs to the relevant libraries and archives. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/daveearlfinal-120111193600-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 際際滷show to accompany Sydney Summer School Guest Lecture, HSTY2614, &quot;Australian Social History.&quot; 11am, 12th January 2011. Full list of references for this lecture is available at http://daveearl.net. Copyright of the images included belongs to the relevant libraries and archives.
Dave Earl - The Rise of the Nuclear Family from Dave Earl
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-davegearl-48x48.jpg?cb=1523149606 daveearl.net https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/nswhistoryweekapictureandathousandwords-130908221010--thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/nsw-history-week-a-picture-and-a-thousand-words/26009448 NSW History Week: A Pi... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013-04whatshotinhistory-final-130417001545-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds davegearl/2013-04-whats-hot-in-history-final The Sad (?) Story of J... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013-03-15comingofwhiteaustralia-130320165348-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds davegearl/2013-0315-coming-of-white-australia The Coming Of White Au...