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Excerpt from review of Rob Riley |
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Excerpt of review of Compromised Jurisprudence |
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Excerpt from review of Cleared Out |
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Excerpt from review of Uncommon Ground
Importantly, these essays seek to understand — rather than praise or condemn — and to put these women in a very complex history. The collection also contributes to current debates concerning the appropriateness or otherwise of white people writing Aboriginal history. The editors argue, quite rightly, that white women need to understand their relationship to Aboriginal women in a historical and an ongoing context.
The most engaging chapters are those whose authors, such as Christine Brett Vickers and Victoria Haskins, have a personal relationship with their subject. Haskins, for instance, little imagined “that I would find the history of Aboriginal oppression and resistance directly embedded in my own family history”. Her great-grandmother, Joan Kingsley-Strack (Ming), was a rather conservative, privileged North Shore wife and mother who, because of her relationship with domestic worker Mary, became active in Aboriginal rights in the 1930s. Drawing largely on the correspondence between Mary and Ming, Haskins asserts that such “documents as Ming left provide a powerful reply to the stolen generations: the silence of the white households onto which Aboriginal girls were placed”. Other chapters in the collection, such as Stephanie Gilbert’s and Cole’s, remain rather dry, reading as mere catalogues of events.
Perhaps the most fascinating topics in this collection are contained in the fourth and final section, “Knowing the Aborigines”. Discussed here are Daisy Bates and Billingee’s collaboration to produce an illustrated book on the Kimberly’s culture heritage, Elizabeth Durack’s creation of Aboriginal artist “Eddie Burrup” and Catherine Martine’s 1923 novel, The Incredible Journey. Margaret Allen suggests the “Martin… might be seen as the first Australian writer to critique the removal of Indigenous children in a literary work” and this at a time when removal was official government policy in all states. These topics are certainly worthy of book-length studies.
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Extract of review Paint Me Black
This is a simple but beautifully told story of the life of Claire Henty-Gebert, the daughter of an Aboriginal woman and a vicious property owner, who was born around Barrow Creek in the Northern Territory at some time before 1929.
It tells the story of her happy life at the Methodist mission on Crocker Island, of her evacuation to Otford, south of Sydney, during Word War II, her marriage, her children, dealing with Cyclone Tracy in 1974, and her eventual reunion with her family in 1989. |
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Review of Seeking Racial Justice
The book organises the decades into three periods and themes based on major policy assumptions prevalent in Australia’s national argument about race: segregation/assimilation (1938-61), assimilation/integration (1959-67), and integration/self-determination (1968-78).
Horner’s analysis of the 40 years reveals two pivotal shifts in the story: the ascendance of black leadership in the advancement movement and the ascendance of the self-determination assumption. This unsentimental reflection on some of the motives, shortcomings, and successes FCAATSI leadership from one leader’s perspective will be of interest to specialist reading in the US and other postcolonial countries. S.R Martin, Michigan Technological University |
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Review of Thinking Black
In a twenty-four page introduction the authors give a clear outline of William Cooper’s rather extraordinary life, to date only the subject of a brief ADB entry by Diane Barwick and scattered references in other works of Aboriginal history.
Attwood and Markus have presented us with a rich body of material to ponder and Aboriginal Studies Press have produced a handsome book, appropriately illustrated, to complement their splendid collection of documents. |
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Review of Mutton Fish
The result is an interesting mix of oral history and research that provides an overview of the importance of the mutton fish in indigenous coastal cuisine over the past 20,000 years. The writers use extensive first-person accounts from local Aborigines to recall not only a history of the mollusc, but also to provided a sensitive account of the changing nature of coastal Aboriginal life from Wollongong to the Victorian border. At times, the abalone story seems almost secondary to the fascinating picture of everyday Aboriginal life, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s. |
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Review of Whitening Race
An excerpt from a review of Whitening Race in the Australian Critical Race and Whiteness Studies Association Journal follows: |
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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... This book, or chapters of it, would add to most reading lists of subjects engaged in Aboriginal health, Australian history, and research ethics and practice across a range of disciplines.' |
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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, fit together nicely to make an interesting, accessible and well-woven whole, that has a lot of useful things to say about Torres Strait…The collection is a valuable addition to our understanding of the issues that are shaping contemporary Torres Strait society. |
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Review of Paddy’s Road |












