About the Author:
Tara Brabazon is Associate Professor in the School of Media, Communication and Culture at Murdoch University, Western Australia. She is the author of five books on cultural studies, including 'Digital Hemlock: Internet Education and the Poisoning of Teaching' (2002) and 'Playing on the Periphery: Sport, Identity and Memory' (2004). She has published over fifty refereed articles and book chapters. In 1998 Brabazon won the Australian National Teaching Award for the Humanities and she has been twice short-listed for Western Australian Citizen of the Year.
Review:
'People like to call psychoanalysis Freudian, philosophy Hegelian, postmodernism Baudrillardian...but when it comes to cultural studies, make mine Brabazonian. From Revolution to Revelation is a superb book that picks apart popular memory, separating useless, morbid nostalgia from inspiring, vital recall. In her racy, electric writing, Brabazon takes us from the smallest, most endearing details of popular texts and events through to the full-blown creation of new, fluid communities. Hers is a cultural politics that comes with anger, laughter, style and wisdom. This is a book that brings both revolution and revelation.' Adrian Martin, Film Critic 'From the first to the last page, From Revolution to Revelation is a very personal book. Brabazon's interest in popular memories that are partly hr own guarantees for an immensely entertaining style of writing...her studies keep the promise of providing revelation.' American Studies
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