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MACKIE, VERA (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   108787


Embodied memories, emotional geographies: Nakamoto Takako's diary of the Anpo struggle / Mackie, Vera   Journal Article
Mackie, Vera Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract In this article I carry out a close reading of Nakamoto Takako's book, My Diary of the Anpo Struggle (1963). Nakamoto was a writer and activist who was active in leftwing politics, the labour movement and the proletarian literature movement in the 1920s and 1930s and returned to the movement after 1945. Her published diary recounts her participation in the struggle against the renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty and her other political activities. The book is a mixture of personal memory and political history and provides us with a distinctive 'map' of one person's emotional geography of Tokyo.
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2
ID:   047461


Human rights and gender politics: Asia-pacific perspectives / Hilsdon, Anne-Marie (ed); Macintyre, Martha (ed); Mackie, Vera (ed); Stivens, Maila (ed) 2000  Book
Macintyre, Martha Book
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Publication London, Routledge, 2000.
Description ix, 240p.
Standard Number 0415191734
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
043246323.34/HIL 043246MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   156980


You’ve mistaken me for a butterfly / Mackie, Vera; Kanamori, Mayu   Journal Article
Mackie, Vera Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The multimedia work You’ve Mistaken Me for a Butterfly was performed by Mayu Kanamori, accompanied by Terumi Narushima on piano, at the University of Wollongong (UOW) in June 2017. The performance was associated with the Biennial Conference of the Japanese Studies Association of Australia (convened by Vera Mackie) and the Exhibition Shadow Worlds (curated by Agnieszka Golda at the TAEM Gallery at UOW), where diaspora was a major theme. The performance is part of a larger work by Mayu Kanamori which explores the histories of Japanese women who migrated to Australia. Here the work is reproduced as a poetic photo-essay. The performance and poem focus on Okin, a Japanese woman who was caught up in a court case in 1898, when two white men were accused of sexually assaulting her. The events took place near Butterfly, an outback mining town in Western Australia.
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