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Coming up
Professor John Maynard (Fight for Liberty and Freedom and Aboriginal Stars of the Turf) and Dr Yasmine Musharbash (Yuendumu Everyday, to be published February 2009) will be the guests of the Perth Writers’ Festival in February 2009. Visit http://www.perthfestival.com.au/perthwritersfestival/ for more information.

Awards
John Maynard’s research and scholarship was acknowledged with the following two awards:

Quentin Beresford’s Rob Riley
Winner — Stanner Award, 2007



Recent Launches and Events

an_appreciation An Appreciation of Difference by Melinda Hinkson & Jeremy Beckett was launched by Professor Marilyn Strathern at the Ownership and Appropriation conference, Auckland New Zealand on Tuesday 11 December 2008.

yuendumu_everyday Yuendumu Everyday by Yasmine Musharbash was launched by Professor Diane Austin-Broos at the Ownership and Appropriation conference, Auckland New Zealand on Thursday 13 December 2008.

Holding Men
Book Launch, Broome and Melbourne
With promotional help from the Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health, and support from the Lingiari Foundation and Melbourne University, Brian McCoy's Holding Men was launched in Broome and Melbourne.

Kimberley community men, George Lee and Robert McKay spoke about their lives and experiences at both launches, making clear to the audiences the power of kanyirninpa in their lives; how it helps to keep men and communities strong.

mccoy_web

Pat Dodson, Brian McCoy, Paul Lane at the
Lingiari Foundation, with Broome musicians Stephen "Bamba" Albert & Michael Manolis


 

Patrick Dodson officially launched the book in Broome in front of an audience which included local politicans and academics, while Professor Ian Anderson launched the book in Melbourne to a crowd of about eighty people, including academics and health practitioners. Sales were strong at both launches and print reviews and author interviews on radio have ensured ongoing interest in the book.

 

Doreen Kartinyeri
Book Launch, Adelaide
On 8 July, family, elders and community members from the Kaurna and Ngarrindgeri people gathered to honour Dr Doreen Kartinyeri’s life at the launching of her autobiography:
Doreen Kartinyeri:
My Ngarrindjeri Calling


Son, Klynton Wanganeen, was busy with radio interviews in the minutes leading up to the launch. The Advertiser newspaper undertook an interview and took photos.

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Sandra Saunders, co author Sue Anderson & Lydia Rankine

A welcome to country was provided in language by one of Doreen’s grandchildren and Lester Irabinna-Rigney, as MC, led the audience through the event. One after the other, people spoke about their memories of her: her strength, her investigative powers, her companionship, her mothering, her scholarship and her storytelling. A common theme between the speakers was the way Doreen’s voice comes through the book: as if she were just across the table, cup of tea in hand, having a yarn.

Professor Paul Hughes, the person who encouraged Doreen Kartinyeri to investigate genealogy was followed by Professor Peter Buckskin who officially launched the book. Co-author, Sue Anderson, reminded the audience of the process of writing the book together, Doreen’s daughter Lydia Rankine and her niece spoke about Doreen from the family’s viewpoint. Sandra Saunders, who was strong alongside Doreen during the hard times of the Hindmarsh Island Royal Commission and the devastating outcome, through to the Federal Court’s vindication of the women, spoke too. Her artwork is on the front cover of the book. A song, written in honour of Doreen, was sung.

Tandanya in NAIDOC week was a great setting for the launch of this Ngarrindjeri warrior’s life story.


 

cautious_silence

A Cautious Silence
Book Launch, Sydney

The latest book from AIATSIS Visiting Research Fellow, Geoff Gray, A Cautious Silence, was launched at Gleebooks in Sydney on Friday 30 November.

Professor Diane Bell launched the book in a spirited speech which concluded with these words:
Although some of the materials have appeared in print, and may have been accessible to researchers, this is the first attempt to integrate the documents into a coherent, compelling account of the political history of anthropology in Australia. I hope A Cautious Silence is read and reviewed by a broad sector of the population at home and abroad. I hope the book will open the door for further debate, research, articles and monographs by a range of parties. Geoff has an important story to tell of the politics of anthropology in the Australian context in the period from 1920 to the 1960s. It is, I think, a sign of maturity of the discipline that such a book be published and discussed rigorously. As Gray argues, the silencing of researchers has not served us well and knowing that history could guide us in the future. Let the stories be told.

 

white_christ

White Christ Black Cross
Book launch, Townsville

Professor Noel Loos’s book, White Christ Black Cross, was launched by Professor Vice Chancellor Janet Greeley at James Cook University on Wednesday 14 November at 5.30pm.

Launches and Events, 2005–2007

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Reviews

convincing_ground

Excerpt from reviews of Convincing Ground
Bruce Pascoe

Barry Dickins, Overland 189, Summer 2007
...It gives its reader the rare chance to understand hundreds of years of harm and a million longings...Here the sense of place is real and convincing as well as refreshingly penned. It feels that the creator of this healing work of gorgeous words in several languages no longer languishes between Heaven and Hell, but as a Wathaurong man is the first poet of his people.

Paul Burns, Reviews in Australian Studies, Vol 2, No 7, 2007
...This beautifully written book, with its fierce determination to recognise and right the wrongs of history, is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand where Aboriginal people are coming from. Some passages may unduly perturb university-trained historians like myself, or mightily disturb the general reader. That is partly the author’s intention. But it is sometimes a good thing to have one’s ideas so shaken up that one is forced to rethink them.

Sydney Morning Herald, July 17, 2007
...Pascoe insists it is not another black armband version of Australian history. It is simply an attempt "to fall in love with your country" by looking with hardedged honesty, at the way the Aboriginal people (specifically the Kulin clans around Port Phillip and western Port) were treated by early settlers and then using that as a stepping stone to abroader understanding of what it actually means to be an Australian.

 

abor_darwin

Excerpt from reviews of Aboriginal Darwin
Toni Bauman

Genevieve Swart, Sun Herald, March 18, 2007
Bauman has produced an insightful and sensitive guide to Aboriginal culture, with a section on responsible travel including rules on visiting communities. For visitors wanting to open the door to indigenous culture in the Top End's tropical city, this book is a key.

Nicolas Rothwell, The Australian, February 2007
Aboriginal Darwin.. .goes some way to uncovering the indigenous experience of recent decades. It is a poignant, disturbing book, much concerned with absences and erasures of evidence.

 

kidd

Excerpt of reviews of Trustees on Trial
Ros Kidd

Alan Gold, Good Reading, February 2007
...It is a scandal of breathtaking proportions. Kidd is to be congratulated for demanding that our governments must be held to the same depth of accountability as they would demand of any financial institution taking and dealing with public funds.

Helen Burrows, Indigenous Law Bulletin, February 2007
Dr Kidd’s assertions are cogent and compelling. With the support documentary evidence she references, lawyers would be able to put forward a persuasive case against governments…Trustees on Trial: Recovering the Stolen Wages is a harrowing account of Australia’s enduring past, painstakingly and courageously researched and engagingly written by one of Australia’s most informed authorities.

 

Riley_frontcover.jpg

Excerpt from reviews of Rob Riley
Quentin Beresford

Paul Kraus, Weekender, July 29, 2006
Of the many books that have been published in recent years on Aboriginal society and people, this biography must surely rank as one of the finest... more

Warren Brewer, The Mercury Magazine, Saturday June 17, 2006
This is an account of a modern tragedy and it weighs heavily...more

Stephen Saunders, The Canberra Times: Panorama, Saturday June 15, 2006
Going deeper, maybe some real positives emerge from Riley’s chequered career. In my view, Beresford largely lives up to his credo of balancing natural sympathy and professional detachment...more

 

broome.jpg

Excerpt from review of A Man of all Tribes
Richard Broome & Corrine Manning

Philip J Morrissey, Australian Journal of Indigenous Education
In a fine passage Broome and Manning write that for Alick life ‘was a journey to oneness’... A Man of All Tribes is a timely production that provides us with more generous perspectives for thinking about the nature of identity and what it means to be Australian.

 

strelein_front

Excerpt of reviews of Compromised Jurisprudence
Lisa Strelein

Jean Zorn, Florida International University, USA, Pacific Affairs,
Vol. 80, No.1 - Spring 2007
Compromised Jurisprudence is a compact and well sign-posted roadmap, tracing a logical pathway through what might otherwise seem a plethora of unrelated or even contraryjudicial decisions....others will surely provide those, and, in the meantime, this handy little volume provides an excellent. reference and starting point.

National Indigenous Times
, July 27, 2006
Lisa is an internationally recognised expert on native title whose work has been adopted by judges and has influenced legal practitioners. Her book provides an overview of each of the key native title decisions with balanced analysis and identification of some of the key themes and trends...more

 

Cleared_Out_cover_web

Excerpt from reviews of Cleared Out
Sue Davenport, Peter Johnson & Yuwali

Sydney Morning Herald,
2006
This book has many things going for it - the superb maps and pictures, the clarity of narrative and the admirable restraint in apportioning blame or making moral judgements...more

The Weekend Australia, November 2005
Hence, for the authors of Cleared Out, the need for an ‘honourable dialogue’ in which the dominant society discards its sense of social and cultural sovereignty. Their meticulously...more

Sydney Morning Herald, November 2005
Try to image, for a minute, the scene. You’re 17 and the 20th century has just come rolling into your world, the Great Sandy Desert of Western Australia. Metal does not exist; your tools are made of wood or stone...more

 

uc_ground

Excerpt from reviews of Uncommon Ground
Anna Cole, Victoria Haskins & Fiona Paisley (eds.)

The Canberra Times
, Saturday August 20, 2005
An edited collection of biographical essays, written in the main by academics, both black and white, male and female, it responds to a professional curiosity as to what white women contributed, if anything, to the struggle of Aboriginal rights in the early decades of the 20th century...more

Anette Bremer, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, API Review of Books, April 2006
This is an extraordinarily refreshing collection of essays, each contribution teasing out different aspects of Indigenous/non-Indigenous relations…more

 

HentyGWEB
Extract of review of Paint Me Black
Claire Henty-Gebert

Bruce Elder, Sydney Morning Herald, August 6-7, 2005
It is a tragedy that Australia has so few first-person accounts of Aboriginal life in the 19th century, but Aboriginal Studies Press is attempting to redress the balance with fine contemporary accounts. This is...more


 

horner

Extract of review of Seeking Racial Justice
Jack Horner

CHOICE
, Vol.42, No.10, June, 2005
Horner’s personal memoir traces the development of the Australian “whitefella” side of the movement for Aboriginal advancement from roughly 1938 to 1978. The most notable organisation is the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, or FCAATSI. The growth and demise of FCAATSI is the focus, though the narrative and the elements of Horner’s story extend to other bodies of white reformist involvement.
The book organises the decades into three periods...more


 

thinkingblackWEB

Extract of review of Thinking Black
Bain Attwood & Andrew Markus

Richard Broome, History Australia, Vol.2, No.2, 2005
William Cooper, a Yorta Yorta man, is well known with the Aboriginal community of south eastern Australia, despite passing away over two generations ago in 1941. However,...more

 

mf-small

Extract of review of Mutton Fish
Beryl Cruse, Liddy Stewart & Sue Norman

Bruce Elder, Sydney Morning Herald, July 16-17, 2005
To most non-Aboriginal Australians, the mutton fish is known as abalone, a prized seafood delicacy. This book,...more

 

wr-small
Extract of review of Whitening Race
Aileen Moreton-Robinson (ed.)

Fiona Probyn, Australian Humanities Journal, June 2005
One last thing from this reviewer – the title of the book. It makes strange things happen. It makes possible sentences like this: 'Whitening Race contributes to the displacement of white privilege in this country'; or 'Whitening Race will disrupt the way we think about race'...more

 

doctorswriting

Extract of review of Reading Doctors' Writing
David Piers Thomas

Shaun Ewen, VicHealth Koori Health, Research & Community Development Unit
'This book is a welcome addition to the Indigenous health literature, particularly the relationship between health and history...more

 

wovenhistories

Excerpt from review of Woven Histories, Dancing Lives
Richard Davis (ed.)

The Australian Journal of Anthropology
, 2005
…these essays, covering a range of topics and emanating from a variety of disciplinary traditions,...more

 

dodson2

Review of Paddy’s Road
Kevin Keeffe

Bruce Elder, Sydney Morning Herald, September 2003
The title Paddy’s Road is a cleaver and accurate description of the rich historical journey that underpins this biography of the Aboriginal leader Patrick Dodson. Rather than just recounting Dodson’s life,...more

 

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Features

Frances Peters-Little’s speech to Meet the Press at the AIATSIS Conference in November 2004 was an inspiring call to arms. ‘Adding to my uncertainty or lets say, newness, on becoming an Indigenous writer and academic, has been for me, trying to balance the various values and experiences that I have learnt from being a media maker, writer and an academic, and as an Indigenous person. But instead of finding my various backgrounds to be an entire waste of time, or that my prior disciplines to be somewhat disconnected from each other or indeed chaotic, I have found that my past experiences have allowed me to be able to, what I call, learn how to apply the practical to the unattainable.’... More


E-News

ASP’s new e-newsletter helps keep you up to date with our new publications. Visit www.aiatsis.gov.au/asp/docs/mailinglist.htm to let us know what information you’re interested in.

ASP e-newsletter 2008 issue 11 [pdf] 63.8KB

ASP e-newsletter 2008 issue 10 [pdf] 350.8KB

ASP e-newsletter 2008 issue 9 [pdf] 324.2KB


ASP e-newsletter 2007 issue 8 [pdf] 242.5KB

ASP e-newsletter 2007 issue 7 [pdf] 447.6KB

ASP e-newsletter 2007 issue 6 [pdf] 144KB

ASP e-newsletter 2006 issue 5 [pdf] 167KB

ASP e-newsletter 2006 issue 4 [pdf] 54KB

ASP e-newsletter 2005 issue 3 [pdf] 68KB

ASP e-newsletter 2005 issue 2 [pdf] 39.2KB

ASP e-newsletter 2005 issue 1 [pdf] 48.2KB

 



New books
You can download the 2008-09 Catalogue (pdf) or call and ask for a copy to be mailed.

Copyright
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