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Articles by Tara Brabazon 榴莲视频>
Close and unobtrusive observations can reveal more to the open-minded researcher than focus groups and surveys, says Tara Brabazon
Technology can facilitate scholarship, particularly when it is intuitive and user-friendly, argues Tara Brabazon
The passing of American singer, guitarist, songwriter and civil-rights activist Odetta reminds us of the power of music and the relevance of history, says Tara Brabazon
The standard critical and academic response to the film Australia from the likes of Germaine Greer miss the point about the artificiality of cinema and the use of sentiment as style, argues Tara Brabazon
Tara Brabazon argues that popularising serious ideas enlightens no one
At a time when writing on technology and the future is banal, Tara Brabazon discovers a new source of trenchant critical commentary
Tara Brabazon on John Sergeant and Kristina Rihanoff’s thrilling subversion of the controlling, conservative dark side of light entertainment
Tara Brabazon on the rise of the soundbite over analysis
In his latest TV series, Jamie Oliver adopts a ministerial cloak while undermining governmental efforts and mechanisms to effect social change, argues Tara Brabazon
Tara Brabazon offers her students funky furniture and an opportunity to find out what their international peers are up to
The meetings called all too frequently by administrators are all too often unnecessary, and all too often hellish, says Tara Brabazon
The click-and-copy culture of “fast capitalism” breeds credulity. Tara Brabazon on educators’ duty to unsettle, probe and offer alternatives
It’s time men recognised the powerful relationships and allegiances between administrative and academic women and how much academe depends on their contributions
Tara Brabazon on competing visions of ownership, content and scholarship
Tara Brabazon ponders a future bereft of the custodians of knowledge. Science fiction – or the all-too-probable result of the devaluation of librarians?
Monographs, conferences and keynotes are vital elements of the modern scholarly world, but they are by no means the only, let alone the best, ways to spread ideas and insights. As Tara Brabazon notes, teaching can be a powerful, and inspiring, method of disseminating findings
In an era of media-manipulated ‘reality’, Tara Brabazon is inspired by helping students learn to use oral history techniques to capture genuinely authentic voices
The PowerPoint presentation is redefining public speaking. Tara Brabazon argues that it is an unnecessary evil
Textbooks have been neglected in favour of other media, but Tara Brabazon argues the case for their importance
The spark of connection between lecturers and students cannot be duplicated, although digitisation has its place in preserving special, life-changing lectures
Stop decrying the signal-to-noise ratio in online scholarly resources, says Tara Brabazon, and give open-source web journals your full support
Country music is ethnography with a banjo, and Tara Brabazon discovers that it is as relevant to university life and Friday-night Eastbourne as it is to Appalachia