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9/11: Re-membering absent bodies
Published date: Monday, September 11, 2006
By: Greg Clarke And Justine Toh
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On September 11, 2006, CASE ran a two-hour seminar about the imagery of 9/11 and religious interpretations of its meaning.

Greg Clarke and Justine Toh presented reflections on the way the events we summarise as ‘9/11’ have been depicted, are now being reconstructed and retold in films and documentaries, and the various symbols and iconic photographs that are now associated with it. These reflections are undergirded by the worldview and

Filed under : AudioArts & Education
Science, certainty and ambiguity
Published date: Tuesday, August 22, 2006
By: Ross Mckenzie

Upon entering university, what should the average tertiary student hope to learn? Ross McKenzie investigates.

(Ross McKenzie is a Professorial Research Fellow in the Department of Physics at the University of Queensland.)

An address given at the Annual Academic Awards Dinner, Cromwell College, University of Queensland, August 22, 2006.

Thank you for this opportunity to reflect a little on academic life. It is good to acknowledge achievement, not

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Filed under : Arts & EducationScience & Medicine
Truly Omen-ous?
Published date: Tuesday, August 08, 2006
By: Justine Toh

A re-make of the classic horror film highlights the problematic apologetic opportunities afforded by the genre.

There’s a Quit Smoking ad on Sydney buses doing the rounds at the moment: a cigarette that metamorphoses into a foot, some toes of which have rotted off due to gangrene, a side-effect of a smoking-related disease. The intent is threateningly didactic: this is what can happen if you smoke, so stop it.

The same purpose could be attributed

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Filed under : Arts & Education
Emily Dickinson in Narnia: The buzzing fly in the room
Published date: Saturday, July 01, 2006
By: Ivan Head

Ivan Head wonders why we linger on a fly in the film of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and discovers a possible link to 19th Century American poet, Emily Dickinson.

Now that a cinema has come to Narnia, at least to its outskirts, it is not surprising that visitors to Narnia pass through a curtain of advertising for franchised meals and drinks before the titles appear. Even a magical kingdom needs an economy. But I would like to comment on

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Filed under : Arts & Education
Resurrection in the arts
Published date: Sunday, June 18, 2006
By: Greg Clarke

Deep down we all desire a return from the dead.

The resurrection of Gandalf was one of the great moments in my reading childhood, and perhaps one of the most relieving scenes in modern fiction, and now cinema.The hobbits are not alone; the Balrog did not triumph; the great hope and security of Middle Earth is not lost, but is stronger than before. And more powerful, and more impressive, and more comforting than ever. Gandalf the Grey became Gandalf

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Filed under : Arts & Education
The Bible and literature
Published date: Sunday, June 18, 2006
By: Greg Clarke

A reading list to get you started thinking about this topic

The following books provide a range of material on the relationship between the Bible and literature written in English. CASE welcomes reviews and comments on these books. They are presented for reflection, education and critical analysis—not as a canon of must-reads. Please read with your eyes open and brain engaged!

Files:rl-bible-in-literature.pdf

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Filed under : Arts & Education
History and fiction: partners in persuasion
Published date: Sunday, June 18, 2006
By:
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In 1993, a novel called The Hand That Signed the Paper won the Australian/Vogel Literary Award and then the prestigious Miles Franklin Award in 1995. The novel reveals the atrocious acts of two brothers, Vitaly and Evheny Kovalenko, in the Ukraine during World War II. The brothers joined the SS and went about humiliating, torturing and exterminating Jews, convinced they were administering vengeance for years of hardship caused under the Jewish

Filed under : Arts & Education
Nick Cave and Family First
Published date: Wednesday, January 18, 2006
By: Greg Clarke

Nick Cave directs a violent Australian Western movie that asks the age-old question whether blood is thicker than justice.

Top of the ‘family values’ film recommendations ought to be Nick Cave’s strikingly violent Australian desert Western, The Proposition. It’s all about putting your family first. The story of the film revolves around Captain Stanley’s (played by Ray Winstone) proposition to Charlie Burns (Guy Pearce) of the notorious Burns

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Filed under : Arts & Education
Grace, Karma and Bono
Published date: Friday, November 18, 2005
By: Greg Clarke
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Can we learn a few lessons in evangelism from a rock star? Greg Clarke thinks we can.

We Christians are not to worship idols, and that means rock stars, too. But it doesn’t mean we can’t listen to them, enjoy them, and sometimes even admire them—especially when they deserve it. U2’s Bono is that rare celebrity who seems to have become more, rather than less, admirable over time. Sure, there are probably hushed up incidents, a few sins and

Filed under : Arts & Education
School, morals and values
Published date: Friday, November 11, 2005
By: Andrew Cameron

In the inaugural Isaac Armitage lecture, Andrew Cameron considers what Christian education might look like in a pluralistic society.

The title of my talk, ‘Anglican Schooling in a Pluralistic Society’, could of course mean anything. But I want to talk about what Anglican schools are for, in a world where many people believe many different things. Let me assume at the outset that a church school has some sort of intention to ‘bless the world’

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Filed under : Arts & Education
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