Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
Professor Anna Johnston
Professor

Anna Johnston

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53215

Overview

Background

Anna Johnston is Professor in English Literature in the School of Communication and Arts, and was Deputy Director of UQ's Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, 2018-20. Anna worked at the University of Tasmania, where she was Director of the Centre for Colonialism and Its Aftermath (2013-16) and an Australian Research Council Queen Elizabeth II Research Fellow (2007-14). In 2014-15, Anna was Visiting Professor of Australian Studies at the University of Tokyo.

In 2020, Anna completed her ARC Future Fellowship: “The Laboratory of Modernity: Knowledge Formation and the Australian Settler Colonies (1788-1900).” This major project traced how knowledge created in the early Australian colonies was circulated by print culture through imperial networks. From 2016-2020, Anna was also a member of the multi-institutional ARC grant “Intimacy and violence in Anglo Pacific Rim settler colonial societies, 1830-1930” (University of Newcastle), in which she focused on evangelical missionaries and colonial settlers who studied Indigenous languages in Australia and the Pacific. For a recent overview of this project, see UQ’s HASS Researchers.

With Sandra Philips, Anna leads UQ's Australian Studies Research Node at UQ (2020-).

Anna has published widely in the field of colonial and postcolonial studies, focussing on literary and cultural history: her new monograph The Antipodean Laboratory: Making Colonial Knowledge, 1770-1870 will be published in October 2023 (CUP). An edited collection with Em. Professor Elizabeth Webby (Sydney University) Eliza Hamilton Dunlop: Writing from the Colonial Frontier (Sydney University Press 2021) was published in the Sydney Studies in Australian Literature series. She has particular interests in settler colonialism, travel writing, and missionary writing and empire.

Anna is an experienced Masters and PhD supervisor, with 23 HDR completions. She is available to supervise topics on Australian literature (past and present), colonial and postcolonial world literature and cultural history, and travel writing, life writing, and print culture and book history studies. You can read about Anna's award-winning students here, including:

From 2023, Anna is the Director of Indigenous Engagement for the School of Communication and Arts. She is also the 2022 John Oxley Library Honorary Fellow at the State Libary of Quensland.

Availability

Professor Anna Johnston is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Coursework), The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research impacts

Anna is regularly involved with the galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM) sector in building and sharing knowledge between universities and the public in the cultural sectors. For example, in 2019, Anna led a new collaboration between UQ and the National Library of Australia to digitise the popular geographical magazine Walkabout (1934-74) on TROVE, with the support of a UQ HASS Partnership grant. In 2022-23, Anna held the John Oxley Library Honorary Fellowship for her project "History and Fiction: Mapping Frontier Violence in Colonial Queensland Writing."

Anna regularly engages with media outlets to discuss books, literary history, and writing:

  • "The Antipodean Laboratory and the 'Sea-Girt Prison': Print Culture on Norfolk Island, 1840-44", paper for University of Newcastle, on YouTube for NSW History Week 2023,
  • Interviewed for The Storyteller With No Audience, The Museum of Bad Vibes, BBC Sounds, 2 August 2022
  • Interview on the Irish-Australian poet Eliza Hamilton Dunlop, Uncommon Sense, with Judith Peppard, 3RRRFM, Melbourne, 22 June 2021
  • Article in The Conversation on the Irish-Australian poet Eliza Hamilton Dunlop, 17 June 2021
  • Interview on what makes an Australian book a classic (at 1h.37m). Afternoons with Katherine Feeney, ABC Radio Brisbane, 10 February 2020
  • Interview (with Charlotte-Rose Millar) Popsart, 1 March 2019
  • Blog post: "Plants, Potions and Love Magic," UQ Art Museum Second Sight Exhibition, March-June 2019.
  • "In Conversation with Min Jin Lee," Brisbane Writers Festival, University of Queensland, 6 September 2017.
  • Panelist: "Colonial Stories" panel, Brisbane Writers Festival event, 11 September 2016.

Works

Search Professor Anna Johnston’s works on UQ eSpace

69 works between 1996 and 2024

61 - 69 of 69 works

2001

Book Chapter

Antipodean heathens: The London Missionary Society in Polynesia and Australia, 1800-1850

Johnston, Anna (2001). Antipodean heathens: The London Missionary Society in Polynesia and Australia, 1800-1850. Colonial frontiers: Indigenous-European encounters in settler societies. (pp. 68-81) edited by Lynette Russell. Manchester, United Kingdom: Manchester University Press.

Antipodean heathens: The London Missionary Society in Polynesia and Australia, 1800-1850

2001

Journal Article

The book eaters: textuality, modernity, and the London Missionary Society

Johnston, Anna (2001). The book eaters: textuality, modernity, and the London Missionary Society. Semeia, 88, 13-40.

The book eaters: textuality, modernity, and the London Missionary Society

2000

Book Chapter

Settler colonies

Johnston, Anna and Lawson, Alan (2000). Settler colonies. A companion to postcolonial studies. (pp. 360-376) edited by Henry Schwarz and Sangeeta Ray. Malden, Mass USA: Blackwell. doi: 10.1111/b.9780631206637.2004.00021.x

Settler colonies

2000

Journal Article

On the importance of bonnets: the London Missionary Society and the politics of dress in nineteenth-century Polynesia

Johnston, Anna (2000). On the importance of bonnets: the London Missionary Society and the politics of dress in nineteenth-century Polynesia. New Literatures Review, 36, 114-127.

On the importance of bonnets: the London Missionary Society and the politics of dress in nineteenth-century Polynesia

1999

Journal Article

Unbecoming Post-Colonial Narratives: Eric Michaels’ 'Unbecoming: An AIDS Diary'

Johnston, Anna (1999). Unbecoming Post-Colonial Narratives: Eric Michaels’ 'Unbecoming: An AIDS Diary'. Southern Review, 32 (1), 60-71.

Unbecoming Post-Colonial Narratives: Eric Michaels’ 'Unbecoming: An AIDS Diary'

1999

Other Outputs

Adam's ribs : gender, colonialism, and the missionaries, 1800-1860

Johnston, Anna (1999). Adam's ribs : gender, colonialism, and the missionaries, 1800-1860. PhD Thesis, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/185182

Adam's ribs : gender, colonialism, and the missionaries, 1800-1860

1997

Journal Article

'God being, not in the bush’: The Nundah Mission (Qld) and Colonialism

Johnston, Anna (1997). 'God being, not in the bush’: The Nundah Mission (Qld) and Colonialism. Queensland Review, 4 (1), 71-80. doi: 10.1017/S1321816600001331

'God being, not in the bush’: The Nundah Mission (Qld) and Colonialism

1996

Other Outputs

The "Memoirs of many in one" : post-colonial autobiography in settler cultures

Johnston, Anna (1996). The "Memoirs of many in one" : post-colonial autobiography in settler cultures. M.A. Thesis, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/uql.2020.762

The "Memoirs of many in one" : post-colonial autobiography in settler cultures

1996

Journal Article

Australian Autobiography and the Politics of Making Post-Colonial Space

Johnston, Anna (1996). Australian Autobiography and the Politics of Making Post-Colonial Space. Westerly, 41 (2), 73-80.

Australian Autobiography and the Politics of Making Post-Colonial Space

Funding

Past funding

  • 2016 - 2020
    Intimacy and violence in Anglo Pacific Rim settler colonial societies (ARC Discovery Project administered by the University of Newcastle)
    University of Newcastle
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2021
    The Laboratory of Modernity: Knowledge Formation and the Australian Settler Colonies (1788-1900)
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Anna Johnston is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    _A Black Hole_: Carceral Logic and Imaginaries of Containment in Fantastic Literature

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Maggie Nolan

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Chasing the Light

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Tom Doig

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

For media enquiries about Professor Anna Johnston's areas of expertise, story ideas and help finding experts, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au