Since WEH Starmer drew attention to the prevailing 'Great Australian Silence' in the late 1960s, it has been the subject of much historical commotion. Indeed, many non-Indigenous historians have been so focussed upon revising and interpreting the Indigenous 'silences' of the official archival records that they have not heard the racket being made by Indigenous artists, performers, biographers, poets, filmmakers and even footballers and their spectators. We welcome these voices, and timely discussions of them, into Aboriginal History, volume 30. This volume explores issues primarily relating to non-textual modes of Aboriginal historical practice. It is inspired by our Australian Research Council Project, 'Unsettling histories: Indigeno...
The forced removal of Indigenous children has been a site of historical debate in Australia since th...
Aboriginal History is a refereed journal that aims to present articles and information in the field ...
In 1968, the Australian anthropologist W. E. H. Stanner famously articulated that the nation’s histo...
In this volume, Mitchell Rolls reconsiders the question of silence in Aboriginal history by examinin...
I can’t usefully start this chapter by asking ‘Who writes Aboriginal history?’ because the written w...
The paper looks at texts selected from the Anthology of Australian Aboriginal Literature edited by A...
The acknowledgment made by the Australian anthropologist, William Stanner, in his 1968 Boyer lecture...
Abstract This paper seeks to identify and explore the differences of Indigenous app...
Australia's national history has rarely allowed space for the history of Aboriginal work. This void ...
In 1968, W.E.H. Stanner delivered a lecture, The Great Australian Silence in which he argued there w...
Indigenous participation in nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century exhibitions and fairs has...
The emotional engagements of both Indigenous and Non-Indigenous people with Indigenous history are e...
May 2007 saw the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum to remove from the Australian Constitution ...
Until the publication of Robert Hall's landmark book The Black Diggers in 1989, Aboriginal and Torre...
This collection grew out of several years of discussions during conference lunch breaks as we met an...
The forced removal of Indigenous children has been a site of historical debate in Australia since th...
Aboriginal History is a refereed journal that aims to present articles and information in the field ...
In 1968, the Australian anthropologist W. E. H. Stanner famously articulated that the nation’s histo...
In this volume, Mitchell Rolls reconsiders the question of silence in Aboriginal history by examinin...
I can’t usefully start this chapter by asking ‘Who writes Aboriginal history?’ because the written w...
The paper looks at texts selected from the Anthology of Australian Aboriginal Literature edited by A...
The acknowledgment made by the Australian anthropologist, William Stanner, in his 1968 Boyer lecture...
Abstract This paper seeks to identify and explore the differences of Indigenous app...
Australia's national history has rarely allowed space for the history of Aboriginal work. This void ...
In 1968, W.E.H. Stanner delivered a lecture, The Great Australian Silence in which he argued there w...
Indigenous participation in nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century exhibitions and fairs has...
The emotional engagements of both Indigenous and Non-Indigenous people with Indigenous history are e...
May 2007 saw the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum to remove from the Australian Constitution ...
Until the publication of Robert Hall's landmark book The Black Diggers in 1989, Aboriginal and Torre...
This collection grew out of several years of discussions during conference lunch breaks as we met an...
The forced removal of Indigenous children has been a site of historical debate in Australia since th...
Aboriginal History is a refereed journal that aims to present articles and information in the field ...
In 1968, the Australian anthropologist W. E. H. Stanner famously articulated that the nation’s histo...