This thing is really get­ting some­where now. I’m a little shell-shocked.

Oh and for those who might have missed it: this is NOT a PhD. It’s a very small Mas­ters thesis. If I ever say I’m doing a PhD I want you all to take me out and get me very drunk until I remem­ber what having fun is like. If I still say I’m doing one in the morn­ing, bash me over the head a bit.

I have lots of bits in my quotes file that I want to build into the text if I can find a spot but I wanted to go through and fix up all the gaps in the cur­rent ver­sion first.

After I’ve done that, I’m prob­ably going to have to start cut­ting down… but that’s good, it’s good to edit and refine. Makes for more coher­ence and less fluff. 

Cur­rently miss­ing the fol­low­ing info, so any keen people who want to help, I’ll love you forever!

  • In Walk­ing on Water, Anna says some­thing about some saus­ages called ‘dubreznas’ or some­thing like that. Does anyone know what this is and more import­antly how to spell it!?! If I can’t find it, I’m just going to call Tony Ayres, the dir­ector, and ask him myself. 
  • I have Web ref­er­ences to pre-colo­nial Aus­tralian indi­gen­ous atti­tudes to queer people being sim­ilar to indi­gen­ous Amer­ican atti­tudes (ie: the ‘two-spirit’ theory) but no print or even rig­or­ous aca­demic Web references. 
  • What was the first Aus­tralian ref­er­ence to bisexu­als as a vector for HIV trans­mis­sion to the “straight” community? 
  • What was the first use of the phrase “men who sleep with men” in Aus­tralia? Was it, as I sus­pect, in an ACON doc­u­ment some­where? (i’ve e‑mailed them…)