mm

Duc Dau

Duc Dau is an Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Humanities at The University of Western Australia. She is the author of Touching God: Hopkins and Love (2012) and co-editor of Queer Victorian Families: Curious Relations in Literature (2015). Her most recent publications have appeared in Critical Social Policy, Religion and Literature, and The Routledge Companion to Victorian Literature. Duc is currently working on Gender, Sexuality, and the Song of Songs in Victorian Literature and Culture (under contract with The Ohio State University Press), along with projects in the areas of digital media, screen media, and bisexuality.

Link: https://www.als.org.au/

MAI CONTRIBUTIONS

In the age of COVID-19, the removal of human touch has meant that many have had to consider new ways of connecting. How do we navigate our way through the world and around other bodies now?

In the age of COVID-19, the removal of human touch has meant that many have had to consider new ways of connecting. How do we navigate our way through the world and around other bodies now?

Newsletter

Feeling inspired by MAI? Dedicated to intersectional gender politics in visual culture? Want to keep your feminist imagination on fire? MAI newsletter will help refresh your zeal for feminism with first-hand news on our new content. 

Subscribe below to stay up-to-date.

* We'll never share your email address with any third parties.

WHO SUPPORTS US

The team of MAI supporters and contributors is always expanding. We’re honoured to have a specialist collective of editors, whose enthusiasm & talent gave birth to MAI.

However, to turn our MAI dream into reality, we also relied on assistance from high-quality experts in web design, development and photography. Here we’d like to acknowledge their hard work and commitment to the feminist cause. Our feminist ‘thank you’ goes to:


Dots+Circles – a digital agency determined to make a difference, who’ve designed and built our MAI website. Their continuous support became a digital catalyst to our idealistic project.
Guy Martin – an award-winning and widely published British photographer who’s kindly agreed to share his images with our readers

Chandler Jernigan – a talented young American photographer whose portraits hugely enriched the visuals of MAI website
Matt Gillespie – a gifted professional British photographer who with no hesitation gave us permission to use some of his work
Julia Carbonell – an emerging Spanish photographer whose sharp outlook at contemporary women grasped our feminist attention
Ana Pedreira – a self-taught Portuguese photographer whose imagery from women protests beams with feminist aura
And other photographers whose images have been reproduced here: Cezanne Ali, Les Anderson, Mike Wilson, Annie Spratt, Cristian Newman, Peter Hershey