Lynne Hume

[citation needed] She has published in areas including paganism, anthropology and the senses; religion and dress; consciousness studies; autoethnography; and convict women in Tasmania in the 1830s.

[7] One reviewer wrote that "Hume did not look specifically at the uniquely Australian features of contemporary Paganism, and tends toward being "descriptive rather than discursive", thereby appealing more to those "interested in an overview of contemporary Pagan belief and practice than those who wish to explore its wider political or social implications".

[8] Hume's book Ancestral Power: The Dreaming, Consciousness and Aboriginal Australians was published by Melbourne University Press in 2002.

It examines how Aboriginal spirituality can offer the non-Indigenous reader insights into "different dimensions of consciousness and other ways of experiencing the world".

[5] She has been interviewed by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Radio National program about topics including popular spiritualities,[12] pre-Christian paganism,[13] the future of religion[14] and fashion and faith.