Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Geraldine Mate is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Geraldine Mate.


Australian Archaeology | 2013

A working profile: The changing face of professional archaeology in Australia

Sean Ulm; Geraldine Mate; Cameo Dalley; Stephen Nichols

Abstract Results from comprehensive surveys of Australian professional archaeologists undertaken in 2005 and 2010 are considered in the context of disciplinary trends, focusing on changes in access and participation, archaeological workplaces, qualifications and skill gaps. Strong growth is demonstrated in the professional archaeology sector between 2005 and 2010, showing substantial restructuring in the last five years, with an increase in Indigenous archaeology and a corresponding decrease in other subfields, especially historical archaeology. An analysis of self-assessed skill sets and skill gaps shows that the training of many professionals continues to leave significant gaps in core skill and knowledge areas which are consistent across industry subfields.


International Journal of Heritage Studies | 2011

Kin, fictive kin and strategic movement: working class heritage of the Upper Burnett

Jonathan Prangnell; Geraldine Mate

The Upper Burnett district of southeast Queensland, Australia is a landscape of working class resilience in the face of natural and institutional oppression. The Upper Burnett was the site of numerous small goldmining towns throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Physically, most of these towns now survive only as archaeological remnants, yet both the tangible heritage elements and the intangible forms of labour heritage, such as stories in the landscape and of movement between places, contribute to the shared and continued attachment of the Burnett community to its mining history. Historical archaeological, sociological and landscape studies, including long-term projects working with descendents of the mining families, have provided detailed insight into the palimpsest of meanings applied to the social landscape of the working class inhabitants. Oral history, documentary and archaeological research have been conducted on the townships of Paradise, Mount Shamrock, Monal and Cania. The cultural landscape of these towns can be seen as a complex heritage of working class pastimes, networks of labour through kin and fictive kin relationships, strategic movement across the region and the interaction between communities. Although the local museums tend to memorialise the physical heritage of the goldmining through collecting and displaying the impressive material culture (such as stampers, berdan pans, mine wheels, etc.), it is the stories, meanings, diaries, and the continued attachments to these places today that play the larger role in the remembering of the working class past.


International Journal of Heritage Studies | 2018

A disconnected journey

Geraldine Mate; Celmara Pocock

Abstract Driving is a dynamic human experience. The act of operating a vehicle, our movement across space and time, and the landscapes we pass afford rich sensory experiences. However, an increasingly controlled environment in the car and on roads is diminishing many sensuous encounters of orientation, sound, smell, touch, and even sight. The growing emphasis on transport infrastructure that prioritises speed, safety, comfort and convenience – dual carriageways, bypasses, ring roads, tunnels and sound barriers – is serving to disconnect us from our journeys as emplaced experiences. These changes are leading to starkly homogeneous journeys devoid of character that result in a loss of experience and place. In this paper we examine the sensory engagement and experiences of car journeys across landscapes, considering both urban and rural environments. Using case studies from different regions of Australia, we examine the bodily experiences of modern motoring. We suggest that there is no longer an immediate engagement with the landscape being traversed. With particular consideration of understanding places in an embodied way, we consider how modernised highways are disconnecting us from developing and maintaining meaning in our understanding of roads as a significant form of heritage, and as an important mechanism through which people experience heritage.


Australian Archaeology | 2016

Another snapshot for the album: a decade of Australian Archaeology in Profile survey data

Geraldine Mate; Sean Ulm

Abstract A comprehensive survey of Australian professional archaeologists undertaken in 2015 is used to explore key aspects and emerging trends in the state of the archaeological profession in Australia. Comparisons are made with data collected using the same survey instrument in 2005 and 2010 to allow consideration of longer-term disciplinary trends related to working conditions, changing participation and access, trends in qualifications and workplace confidence and re-evaluating skills gaps identified in previous surveys. Substantial changes in the archaeological workplace are identifiable with deterioration in employment conditions and an increasingly casualised workforce, contrasting with a growth in professionalisation observed through an increasingly qualified workforce. Restructuring of the discipline observed in previous surveys, showing increases in Indigenous archaeology and a corresponding decrease in other subfields, are less pronounced. Survey data demonstrate the Australian archaeological workforce to be a highly qualified discipline by world standards but also a discipline that is being reshaped by downsizing of government regulation of heritage issues and volatility in the private sector related to external economic factors.


Australian Archaeology | 2010

Mining the Landscape: Finding the Social in the Industrial through an Archaeology of the Landscapes of Mount Shamrock

Geraldine Mate


Australasian historical archaeology | 2014

At the margins: archaeological evidence for Macassan activities in the South Wellesley Islands, Gulf of Carpentaria

Annette Oertle; Matthew Leavesley; Sean Ulm; Geraldine Mate; Daniel Rosendahl


International Journal of Historical Archaeology | 2013

Mount Shamrock: A Symbiosis of Mine and Settlement

Geraldine Mate


Archive | 2018

Raw emotion: the living memory module at three sites of practice

Clemara Pocock; Marion Stell; Geraldine Mate


Queensland Archaeological Research | 2014

Digging deeper: The archaeology of gold mining in Queensland

Geraldine Mate


Archive | 2014

Connections across the Sea: characterising Macassan activities in the South Wellesley Islands, Gulf of Carpentaria

Annette Oertle; Matthew Leavesley; Geraldine Mate; Daniel Rosendahl; Sean Ulm

Collaboration


Dive into the Geraldine Mate's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sean Ulm

James Cook University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cameo Dalley

Australian National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Celmara Pocock

University of Southern Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marion Stell

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Clive McAlpine

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Carter

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge