The essays arise from a particular gathering of scholars: The East India chapter of the Indian Association for the Study of Australia (IASA) held its inaugural international conference in Kolkata on 22–23 January 2009. Much of the work is comparative, exploring common Indian and Australian themes of colonial and postcolonial experience, implications of migration and diaspora, and shared language and literature. The work also explores shared environmental crisis, manifest in landscapes such as the Mouths of the Ganges and Australia’s Murray Darling Basin. Such comparisons indicate our shared experience of the “crisis” of ecological, social, economic and cultural sustainability.
As human future is colonized through environmental degradation, and determined by human migration and shared culture and values, our relationship to “place” is revitalized and reassessed. We seek simultaneously a reconciliation between humans and a realignment of the human-nature relationship. This is the most basic meaning of social and ecological sustainability.
Paul Brown is Head of the School of History and Philosophy at University of New South Wales, Australia. The school hosts an Australian studies program, and courses in Indian history. Paul co-ordinates interdisciplinary environmental studies at UNSW, and his own research takes in social, political and cultural dimensions of environmental policy.
Christopher Conti holds a PhD in English Literature from the University of Sydney, Australia, and is Associate Lecturer and Tutor in the Department of Humanities and Languages at the University of Western Sydney. His work has appeared in journals such as Literature and Aesthetics, Arizona Quarterly, and Studies in the Novel.