"The Second International Symposium on Gallipoli" will bring together international scholars of the Gallipoli Campaign of 1915 working on national, social, economic and military aspects of the campaign, particularly as they are reflected in archival documents, memoirs, newspaper articles, visual art, literature, documentaries and films. Scholars will address the subject from varied perspectives and disciplines based on original documents and primary sources.
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Gallipoli, Australians and Turks: beginnings of a relationship
Ziino Bart
ARC Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of History, Heritage and Society at Deakin University
Loss of Human Resources at Gallipoli
Ibrahim Güran Yumusak
PhD in Economics, Istanbul University, Vice President of Canakkale Vakfi and President of The Research Center of Canakkale.
& Yasar Bülbül
Assistant Professor Kocaeli University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Economics, Economic History chair
Gallipoli POWS : Challenging the Myths
Jennifer Lawless
PhD candidate, History Inspector, NSW Board of Studies
Telling lies for Turkey: Atatürk's quotation and the mischief it has caused
Peter Stanley
National Museum of Australia
Gallipoli 1915: encounters with antiquity
C. J. Mackie
Associate Professor and Director of the Centre for Classics and Archaeology, University of Melbourne
The Remains of the Campaign: Conservation Challenges on the Gallipoli Peninsula
Lucienne M. Thys-Senocak
Associate Professor Koç University, Dept. of Archaeology and the History of Art, Rümeli Fener Yolu, Sariyer, Istanbul, Turkey
Gallipoli from the other side: Researching Turkish Gallipoli Archives
Harvey Broadbent
Senior Research Fellow, Dept. of Modern History, Macquarie University; Director, the Gallipoli Centenary Turkish Archives Research Project
Economic Competition among the big powers before the Gallipoli Campaign in 1915
Mehmet Bulut
Professor, Baskent University, Department of Economics
From Foreign-Dependence to National Solidarity: Rebirth of Turkish Military Industry after the Gallipoli Wars
Yasar Bülbül
Assistant Professor Kocaeli University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Economics, Economic History chair
In commemoration of the landing of the Australasian forces at Gallipoli: Anzac Park and Anzac Day in Palmerston North, New Zealand 1916-1948
Prof Michael Roche
Professor of Geography, School of People Environment and Planning, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand
Baptism by Ottoman Fire: Newfoundland, Collective Memory, and the Gallipoli Campaign
P. Whitney Lackenbauer
Assistant Professor and chair of History, St. Jerome’s University (University of Waterloo), Ontario, Canada.
A Portrait of the Nation as a Young Man: George Lambert, Charles Bean and the Mythologising of Gallipoli
Andrew Yip
PhD candidate, University of Sydney
Understanding the August Offensive: An Operational Analysis
Rhys Crawley
PhD candidate, Australian Defence Force Academy, University of New South Wales
Imagining Gallipoli: The Peninsula in Australian Novels
Christina Spittel
Populating the silent wilderness
Peter Londey
School of Humanities, Australian National University
Harvey Broadbent
Harvey Broadbent is presently Senior Research Fellow in Modern History at Macquarie University directing a research project centred on the Turkish military archives and the Gallipoli Campaign. He is the author of two books on the Gallipoli Campaign, Gallipoli, The Fatal Shore, an illustrated account of the Gallipoli Campaign in the First World War (Penguin-Viking Books, Melbourne, 2005) and The Boys Who Came Home, Recollections of Gallipoli (ABC Books, 1990, 2nd edition 2000).
Mehmet Bulut
Professor at Baskent University Department of Economics
Yasar Bülbül
Assist. Prof., Kocaeli University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Economics, Economic History chair
Rhys Crawley
Rhys Crawley is a PhD student in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy. His dissertation is a re-evaluation of the plans, preparations, limitations, and potential of the August offensive at Gallipoli.
P. Whitney Lackenbauer
P. Whitney Lackenbauer (Ph.D., Calgary, 2004) is assistant professor and chair of History at St. Jerome’s University (University of Waterloo), Ontario, Canada. He is the author or (co-)editor of ten books, including Arctic Front: Defending Canada’s Far North (2008), Battle Grounds: The Canadian Military and Aboriginal Lands (2007), Aboriginal Peoples and Military Participation: Canadian and International Perspectives (2007), and Kurt Meyer on Trial: A Documentary Record (2007). He has published more than two dozen peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on subjects ranging from the comparative politics of contemporary military base closures to Canadian soldier riots in the First World War. His current work includes a comparison of indigenous service in the Second World War in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States, and histories of defence activities in the Cold War Arctic. Dr. Lackenbauer is a Canadian International Council Fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation, a Faculty Associate with the Wilfrid Laurier Centre for Military and Strategic Disarmament Studies, and a Research Associate with the Canadian Forces Leadership Institute.
Jennifer Lawless
Jennifer Lawless is currently the NSW Board of Studies History Inspector, responsible for NSW School History curriculum. She is currently completing a PhD on the Australian POW experience at Gallipoli. This has involved seven trips to Turkey and extensive use of archives in Britain and around Australia. She has been awarded two Australian Military History grants and an award of an Endeavour Research scholarship in 2006. She has been supported in her research by her husband, an accredited English/Turkish translator who has expertise in the Ottoman language.
Peter Londey
Dr Peter Londey is a lecturer in Classics and Ancient History in the School of Humanities at the ANU. He specialises in ancient Greek history in the classical period, while also working as a member of the team writing the Official History of Australian Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Post–Cold War Operations. He holds degrees from the University of New England and Monash University. For many years he held a position as a senior historian at the Australian War Memorial, which is where he developed his interest in Gallipoli.
C. J. Mackie
Chris Mackie, BA Hons (Newcastle, NSW) PhD (Glasgow), studied Classics at the University of Newcastle (NSW) and the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He worked at the University of New England (NSW) for two years before moving to the University of Melbourne. His earlier research was on the Roman poet Vergil, but since then he has focused on the Homeric epics, Greek mythology, and modern responses to ancient cultures. His main teaching responsibilities are in the classical languages and in a wide variety of non-language courses (Ancient Greece: Myth, Art, Text; The Epics of Homer; Underworld and Afterlife; the Epic Cycle and Homeric Hymns). He has been Director of the Centre for Classics and Archaeology (with a break for leave) since its inception in 2000.
Michael Roche
Michael Roche has a PhD from the University of Canterbury and is currently Professor of Geography in the School of People Environment and Planning at Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand. His historical geography research has focussed on forests, agriculture, and environmental management with a particular interest in inter war New Zealand. More recently he has worked on various aspects of the WWI discharged soldier settlement scheme. He has contributed to the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, the Historical Atlas of New Zealand, Environmental Histories of New Zealand and coedited (Dis)Placing Empire with Lindsay Proudfoot.
Peter Stanley
Dr Peter Stanley is Director of the Centre for Historical Research at the National Museum of Australia. He was formerly Principal Historian at the Australian War Memorial, where he worked from 1980 to 2007. While at the Memorial he developed many permanent and temporary exhibitions, including the permanent Gallipoli gallery and the exhibition The Riddles of Anzac, and has published twenty books, including Quinn’s Post, Gallipoli, Anzac. A specialist in the Great War, he was one of the presenters of the 2005 documentary Revealing Gallipoli.
Lucienne M Thys-Senocak
Associate Professor, Lucienne M. Thys-Senocak, Koç University, Dept. of Archaeology and the History of Art, Rümeli Fener Yolu, Sariyer, Istanbul, Turkey
Andrew Yip
Andrew Yip | PhD Candidate
Department of Art History and Theory, The University of Sydney
Ibrahim Güran Yumusak
Dr Ibrahim Güran Yumusak has a (BA) in Political Economy from Istanbul University, and a PhD in Economy from the Istanbul University. Dr. Yumusak is a specialist in Turkish Economy and Knowledge Economy. He has taught Turkish Economy at the Kocaeli University. He is vice president of Canakkale Vakfi (Canakkale Foundation) and president of The Research Center of Canakkale.
Bart Ziino
Dr Bart Ziino is an ARC Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of History, Heritage and Society at Deakin University. He is currently undertaking a history of Australia during the First World War through personal documents. He is author of A Distant Grief: Australians, War Graves and the Great War (2007), and ‘Who owns Gallipoli? Australia’s Gallipoli anxieties 1915-2005’ (Journal of Australian Studies, 2006).
For further information contact:
Dr. M. Mehdi Ilhan
Centre for Arab & Islamic Studies,
Building No. 127
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200 Australia
Telephone: +61 2 61253943
or 61 2 61 54928
Facsimile: +61 2 61255410
Email: mehdi.ilhan@anu.edu.au
http://cais.cass.anu.edu.au