Cultural Studies is an international journal committed to exploring
the relationships between cultural practices and everyday life,
economic relations, the material world, the State, and historical
forces and contexts. It seeks to foster more open analytic,
critical and political conversations by encouraging people to push
the dialogue into fresh, uncharted territory. It also aims to
intervene in the processes by which the existing techniques,
institutions and structures of power are reproduced, resisted and
transformed. Cultural Studies is available both on annual
subscription and from bookstores. For a Free Sample Copy of further
subscription details please contact: Trevina Johnson, Routledge
Subscriptions, ITPS Ltd., Cheriton House, North Way, Andover SP10
5BE. UK.
Special Issue: First Peoples: Cultures Policies Politics Guest edited by Tony Bennett and Valda Blundell First Peoples Tony Bennett and Valda BlundellArticles The harakeke - no place for the bellbird to sing: Western colonisation of Maori art in Aotearoa Rangihiroa Panoho The colonial paintings of Charles Frederick Goldie in the 1990s: the postcolonial Goldie and the rewriting of history Leonard Bell The practice of tribalism in postcolonial New Zealand Ann Sullivan Tall trees need deep roots: biculturalism bureaucracy and tribal democracy in Aotearoa/New Zealand Jeffrey Sissons Border zones: the 'injun-uity' of aesthetic tricks Gerald R. McMaster Translation or perversion: showing First Nations art in Canada Charlotte Townsend-Gault The emergence of postcolonial musical expressions of aboriginal peoples within Canada Elaine Keillor Building a moral community: Tsimshian potlatching implicit knowledge and everyday experiences James A. McDonald A postcolonial experience of Aboriginal identity Stephanie Gilbert 'Talking out of place':: authorizing the Aboriginal sacred in postcolonial Australia Ken Gelder and Jane M. Jacobs Broaching fiction: a short theoretical appreciation of William Ferguson's Nanya Simon During Indigenous media development in Australia: a product of struggle and opposition Helen Molnar Review