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SEMINAR - MELBOURNE CHINESE STUDIES GROUP, Friday 9 April 2010, 6pm [30.03.2010]

Next MELBOURNE CHINESE STUDIES GROUP seminar

Date: Friday 9 April 2010, 6pm
(note not the first Friday this month, due to Easter)

Admission $2 All Welcome

Venue: Jenny Florence Room, 3rd Floor, Ross House, 247 Flinders Lane, Melbourne (between Swanston and Elizabeth Sts)

Topic: Three approaches to telling the stories of Chinese-Australian families - A panel of papers from Chinese Australian Family Historians of Victoria Inc (CAFHOV)

Speakers: Sophie Couchman, Robyn Ansell, Barbara Nichol

The Chinese Australian Family Historians of Victoria (CAFHOV) is a group of people who gather on the first Saturday of very month to discuss issues related to their research into Chinese-Australian family history. These were the papers presented by members of the group at the 'Dragon Tails Conference' held last year in Ballarat.

Sophie Couchman - 'Remembering Chinatown': The history behind a self guided audio tour of Melbourne's Little Bourke Street

Since the early work of labour historians in the 1970s our knowledge of the history of Chinese in Australia has expanded enormously. The challenge is to bring these understandings to the broader Australian public. This paper explores the difficulties and joys of practically applying current perspectives in Chinese-Australian history to a commercial product aimed at the general public.

Robyn Ansell - The Wives of Hin Yung and Ah Whay

The Irish-Chinese connection is illustrated by this transition across one generation - from shame to sobriety, from goldfield survivor to pillar of the community. Creswick and Maryborough are the setting of the story.

Barbara Nichol - Chinese Restaurant Children negotiating Australian lives

We love stories of those valiant pioneers who tamed the bush, but what about the people who pioneered the urban landscape? The early post-federation stories of Melbourne's Chinese restaurant families will be the focus of this paper. 'Restaurant children' recognised the importance of fulfilling the obligations of their Chinese heritage, yet at the same time were negotiating their futures as Australians. They tend not to be described as 'pioneers', yet in many ways their struggles were just as valiant and the obstacles they negotiated were no less daunting.

Talk followed by an informal, inexpensive meal in a nearby Chinatown restaurant.

Following seminar: Fri 7 May 2010

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Asian Australian Studies Research Network

The AASRN is a formal network for academic, community and other institutional groups who research in the area of Asian Australian Studies.

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