Remy Y.S. Low is Senior Lecturer at the University of Sydney, Australia
Suzanne Egan is Lecturer in the School of Social Sciences, Western Sydney University, Australia
Amani Bell is Associate Professor at the University of Sydney, Australia2 Sit Down, Be Humble: The Influence of the Work of Linda Tuhiwai Smith on Our Research
3 The Decolonial Imperative-Text and Context: A Response to Amani Bell and Gulwanyang Moran
4 After Belonging: Aileen Moreton-Robinson's 'I Still Call Australia Home'
5 In Belonging: A Response to Timothy Laurie
6 Deploying Rose and Abi-Rached to 'Make Sense' of the Rise of the 'Brain Sciences' in the Field of Violence Against Women
What Do We Talk About When We Talk About Neuro? A Response to Suzanne Egan
8 The Power, Passions, and Perils of Identity: On Chantal Mouffe
9 Connections, Engagements, and Troubles: A Response to Remy Low10 The Foggy Window: Passive Empathy and the Fight for Testimonial Reading in Neoliberal Higher Education
11 Performing Empathy with Neoliberalism, or Kendall Jenner on the Streets, Thomas Gradgrind in the Sheets: A Response to Lauren Weber
12 Understanding Higher Education Enrolment Through Michel Foucault's Biopolitics
13 Students, Biopolitics, and State Racism: A Response to Ren-Hao Xu
14 Wrestling with Monsters: Critique, Climate Change, and Comets
15 Still Wrestling with Monsters: A Response to Pat Norman
16 Dialogues Between Activist Knowledge and Southern Theory
17 Approximate Geographies: A Response to José Fernando Serrano Amaya18 The Historian as Pedagogue: On Hayden White's Practical Past
19 What Stories to Tell: A Response to Remy Low
20 The Good University? Colourful Histories, Ongoing Troubles, and Changing Contexts
21 The Good University Examined: A Response to Meenakshi Krishnaraj, Ren-Hao Xu, and Pat Norman
22 How We Use Social Theory: Common Threads and Concluding Thoughts