Many Aboriginal stories have not been allowed to be told historically due to the over-whelming dominance of non-Aboriginal stories. Many Aboriginal stories were once outlawed and so were forgotten, some only partially remembered, many now only told in the language of the invaders. There are other Aboriginal stories, however, especially those of particular urban Aboriginal peoples, which have lain ‘dormant’, protected by subversive family histories and embedded in objects claimed as the possessions of the Aboriginal people concerned. Some of these once ‘swallowed’ stories are now being regurgitated, re-emerging into a world that does not always recognise them as true. I am a non-Indigenous woman anthropologist and in this paper I recount som...
The genre of Australian Aboriginal autobiography is a literature of significant socio-political impo...
May 2007 saw the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum to remove from the Australian Constitution ...
This article explores a First Nations PhD student’s personal narrative of navigating the entanglemen...
The on-line project A History of Aboriginal Sydney, based at the University of Sydney, takes existin...
This research is in the area of life-long learning through storytelling, focusing on the use of mult...
The on-line project A History of Aboriginal Sydney, based at the University of Sydney, takes existin...
Indigenous participation in nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century exhibitions and fairs has...
Archival traces of early discursive advocacy by Noongar people in the southwest region of Australia ...
I can’t usefully start this chapter by asking ‘Who writes Aboriginal history?’ because the written w...
The last decades of previous century has witnessed the burgeoning of life narratives lending voice t...
This article explores stories of rewriting Australian history by Aboriginal women through literature...
Running title: Dispossession, Social Suffering, and Survival. --- Abstract: Aboriginal people in Au...
As an Aboriginal author, my thesis is grounded in an Indigenist paradigm; a paradigm that places Ind...
My development as a writer spans almost.50 years, starting with poetry. Later I expanded my writing...
Too often, Indigenous voices encounter over-mystification, Indigenous testimonies are romanticized, ...
The genre of Australian Aboriginal autobiography is a literature of significant socio-political impo...
May 2007 saw the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum to remove from the Australian Constitution ...
This article explores a First Nations PhD student’s personal narrative of navigating the entanglemen...
The on-line project A History of Aboriginal Sydney, based at the University of Sydney, takes existin...
This research is in the area of life-long learning through storytelling, focusing on the use of mult...
The on-line project A History of Aboriginal Sydney, based at the University of Sydney, takes existin...
Indigenous participation in nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century exhibitions and fairs has...
Archival traces of early discursive advocacy by Noongar people in the southwest region of Australia ...
I can’t usefully start this chapter by asking ‘Who writes Aboriginal history?’ because the written w...
The last decades of previous century has witnessed the burgeoning of life narratives lending voice t...
This article explores stories of rewriting Australian history by Aboriginal women through literature...
Running title: Dispossession, Social Suffering, and Survival. --- Abstract: Aboriginal people in Au...
As an Aboriginal author, my thesis is grounded in an Indigenist paradigm; a paradigm that places Ind...
My development as a writer spans almost.50 years, starting with poetry. Later I expanded my writing...
Too often, Indigenous voices encounter over-mystification, Indigenous testimonies are romanticized, ...
The genre of Australian Aboriginal autobiography is a literature of significant socio-political impo...
May 2007 saw the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum to remove from the Australian Constitution ...
This article explores a First Nations PhD student’s personal narrative of navigating the entanglemen...