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IMAGE: AusStage users include academic researchers, performers and practitioners, students, government representatives, and people from the Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums sector. view more
Credit: Flinders University
A world-leading digital humanities platform preserving and showcasing the history of Australian live performance has been rewarded with a UNESCO Memory of the World accolade.
AusStage, hosted by Flinders University, is now a model being replicated around the world - including the Victoria & Albert Museum-led UKStage and IbsenStage (University of Oslo).
The UNESCO Australian Memory of the World program honours documentary heritage of significance in Australia and around the world, and advocates for its preservation.
Published January 17. 2021 12:01AM | Updated January 17. 2021 12:04PM
Angela Haupt, The Washington Post Get the weekly rundown Email Submit
Take a look back to survey your favorite reads in 2020. They might inspire which titles you pick up in 2021.
Here are 14 books, from a variety of genres, to consider based on recent favorites. If you enjoyed Little Disasters, by Sarah Vaughan, read The Push, by Ashley Audrain (out now)
What happens when a mother doesn t love her daughter? Audrain s debut is a tense, chilling dip into the dark side of motherhood, narrated by Blythe, whose own upbringing raises the question: Can one inherit an inability to parent? The Push is uncomfortable and provocative, like a train wreck that demands your gaze.