Figures
6.1Bungaree – King of the Aborigines of New South Wales. Hand-coloured lithograph by Augustus Earle (1826). Courtesy of Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.
6.2‘To the Editor of The Monitor’, The Monitor (7 July 1826), p. 5, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31757611.
6.3Excerpt from page 2 of The Australian including ‘Van Diemen’s Land News’ (18 October 1826), http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article37071471.
9.1Australian number one singles between 2013 and 2021 divided into singles performed by solo artists/bands and singles that use a featured artist/collaboration.
12.1Bree van Reyk’s Replica Garden. Photo credit: Brett Boardman.
14.1Sweatbox ‘Meltdown’, Hordern Pavilion, 25 February 1989. Image by William Yang.
17.1A portrait of three Chinese gardeners from Irvinebank, Queensland, 1908. Taken on 10 July 1908, available from https://hdl.handle.net/10462/deriv/80145, State Library of Queensland.
17.2Chinese theatre in Hatches Creek, Northern Territory (1942).
17.3Prosperous Mountain Dragon and Lion Dance. Image courtesy of David Wong.
17.4Sydney Conservatorium of Music Chinese Music Ensemble (2023). Image courtesy of Xiaomeng Luo.
20.1Ben Blakeney portrays the spirit of Bennelong. Fairfax SMH-002155906. Courtesy of Sydney Opera House Archives.
20.2Central Australian Women’s Choir perform an impromptu version of the ‘Land Rights Song’ on the occasion of the thirty-year anniversary of the handback of Uluṟu to Aṉangu people, 25 October 2015. Still from https://vimeo.com/144163890, cinematographer Eleanor Gilbert, reproduced with permission.