Ben Silverstein Ben Silverstein i(10785788 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 Preface Crystal McKinnon , Ben Silverstein , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Aboriginal History Journal , no. 46 2022; (p. vii-x)
'Some five years ago, when 250 First Peoples’ delegates from around Australia met at
Uluru to discuss proposals for the constitutional recognition of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples, they acknowledged the importance of recognising the truth
about the past. They did so in the Uluru Statement from the Heart, signed by most but
not all of those delegates, which calls for a process of ‘truth-telling about our history’
that would provide the basis for a ‘fair and truthful relationship with the people of
Australia’. In so doing, they were responding to the insistence of participants in the
2016–17 First Nations Regional Dialogues that ‘people need to know more about
Australian and Aboriginal history’. Though calls for true histories have been heard
across a range of forums for decades at least, these dialogues and the Uluru Statement
have given them a new impetus. We are now seeing the fruits of these moments in
both scholarly research and public institutions.' (Introduction)
1 1 y separately published work icon Aboriginal History Journal no. 46 Crystal McKinnon (editor), Ben Silverstein (editor), 2022 26598823 2022 periodical issue

'The articles in Volume 46 each take provocative and generative approaches to the challenge of historical truth-telling. Examining the public memory of massacres in Gippsland, Victoria, Aunty Doris Paton, Beth Marsden and Jessica Horton trace a history of contestation between, on the one hand, forms of frontier memorialisation articulated to secure colonial possession and, on the other, the sovereign counter-narratives of Gunai Kurnai communities. Heidi Norman and Anne Maree Payne describe Aboriginal campaigns to repatriate Ancestors’ stolen remains over the past fifty years, showing how these campaigns have proceeded along with and as part of nation-building movements towards land rights and self-determination. Their call for Aboriginal relationships with Ancestors to be represented in a National Resting Place aligns their research with these movements. We return to Gunai Kurnai Country in a piece authored by Rob Hudson and Shannon Woodcock, who show how the Krowathunkooloong Keeping Place has formed an important site and tool of community work towards cultural resurgence; the article itself demonstrates the value and importance of collaborative and co-designed research methods. The volume then includes a conversation between Laura McBride and Mariko Smith about their curation of the Australian Museum’s Unsettled exhibition, through which they responded to the 250th anniversary of Cook’s Endeavour voyage along Australia’s east coast by telling true stories that put Cook in his place.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Aboriginal History Journal no. 45 April Crystal McKinnon (editor), Ben Silverstein (editor), 2022 24620443 2022 periodical issue

'This volume begins with Michael Aird, Joanna Sassoon and David Trigger’s meticulous research tracing the well-known but sometimes confused identity of Jackey Jackey of the Lower Logan River in south-east Queensland. Emma Cupitt describes the multivocality and intertextuality of Radio Redfern’s coverage of Aboriginal protests in Sydney as the 1988 Australian Bicentenary celebrations took place elsewhere in the city. Similarly approaching sources for their multiplicity, Matt Poll and Amanda Harris provide a reading of the ambassadorial work performed by assemblages of Yolngu bark paintings in diverse exhibition spaces after the Second World War.

'Cara Cross historicises the production and use of mineral medicine—or lithotherapeutics—derived from Burning Mountain in Wonnarua Country, issuing a powerful call for the recognition of Indigenous innovation as cultural heritage. In a collaborative article, Fred Cahir, Ian Clark, Dan Tout, Benjamin Wilkie and Jidah Clark read colonial records against the grain to narrate a nineteenth-century history of Victorian Aboriginal relationships with fire, strengthening the case for the revitalisation of these fire management practices. And, based on extensive oral history work, Maria Panagopoulos presents Aboriginal narrations of the experience of moving—or being moved—from the Manatunga settlement on the outskirts of Robinvale into the town itself, on Tati Tati Country in the Mallee region of Victoria.

'In addition to a range of book reviews, we are also pleased to include Greg Lehman’s review essay concerning Cassandra Pybus’s recent award-winning Truganini: Journey through the Apocalypse, which considers the implications of our relationships with history and how they help to think through practices of researching and writing Aboriginal history.' (Publication summary)

1 Deep Historicities Laura Rademaker , Ben Silverstein , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies , vol. 24 no. 2 2022; (p. 137-160)

'In seeking to understand the deep past, the knowledges of First Nations peoples and of the various academic disciplines can seem incommensurable. In this essay, we argue the concept of “historicities”, that is, the encultured ways of narrating and conceiving of the past offers to enrich the study of deep history. Sensitivity to the various ways the past is remembered and understood, as well as the ways in which these historicities are dialogically and relationally constructed, offers ways of bringing distinct accounts of the deep past into conversation. Through closely reading various narrations of deep histories of the Tiwi Islands, we suggest ways in which historicities might be understood as coexisting and in relation, without reducing their accounts to a single universalizable story of the past or hierarchy of knowledges. This special issue further explores decolonizing challenges to ways of knowing the deep past from a range of disciplinary perspectives.' (Publication abstract)

1 Reading Sovereignties in the Shadow of Settler Colonialism: Chinese Employment of Aboriginal Labour in the Northern Territory of Australia Ben Silverstein , 2020 single work essay
— Appears in: Postcolonial Studies , vol. 23 no. 1 2020; (p. 43-57)
'The Northern Territory of Australia is often described by historians as marginal and anomalous, characterised by plurality and set apart from the settler colonial south(east). But it has long been subjected to practices of government designed to articulate settler colonialism upon and through its distinctive character. In this article, I take one such governmental project in order to read the antagonistic work of Indigenous and settler sovereignties alongside each other. By examining the imposition of restrictions on Chinese people’s capacity to work and to employ Aboriginal labour in Darwin around 1911, I locate a racialised labour politics and capitalism as central to the obstruction and production of sovereignties. In doing so, this article engages with two recent criticisms of settler colonial studies: one that impresses upon scholars the need to write not only of settlers but also of Indigenous peoples; and another that insists on attending to the specific conditions of settlers of colour or precariously racialised migrants to settler colonies.' (Source: publisher's abstract)
1 On Paternalisms and Aboriginal Agency : From Missions to Neoliberal Policy in the Work of Richard Broome and Noel Pearson Claire McLisky , Ben Silverstein , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Conflict, Adaptation, Transformation : Richard Broome and the Practice of Aboriginal History 2018;
1 Voyaging with Hope : Richard Broome and the Ethics of Aboriginal History Ben Silverstein , 2018 single work criticism
— Appears in: Conflict, Adaptation, Transformation : Richard Broome and the Practice of Aboriginal History 2018;
1 1 y separately published work icon Governing Natives : Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia's North Ben Silverstein , Manchester : Manchester University Press , 2018 19752460 2018 multi chapter work criticism

'In the 1930s, a series of crises transformed relationships between settlers and Aboriginal people in Australia’s Northern Territory. This book examines archives and texts of colonial administration to study the emergence of ideas and practices of indirect rule in this unlikely colonial situation. It demonstrates that the practice of indirect rule was everywhere an effect of Indigenous or ‘native’ people’s insistence on maintaining and reinventing their political formations, their refusal to be completely dominated, and their frustration of colonial aspirations to total control. These conditions of difference and contradiction, of the struggles of people in contact, produced a colonial state that was created both by settlers and by the ‘natives’ they sought to govern.

'By the late 1930s, Australian settlers were coming to understand the Northern Territory as a colonial formation requiring a new form of government. Responding to crises of social reproduction, public power, and legitimacy, they rethought the scope of settler colonial government by drawing on both the art of indirect rule and on a representational economy of Indigenous elimination to develop a new political dispensation that sought to incorporate and consume Indigenous production and sovereignties. This book locates Aboriginal history within imperial history, situating the settler colonial politics of Indigeneity in a broader governmental context. Australian settler governmentality, in other words, was not entirely exceptional; in the Northern Territory, as elsewhere, indirect rule emerged as part of an integrated, empire-wide repertoire of the arts of governing and colonising peoples.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 1 y separately published work icon Conflict, Adaptation, Transformation : Richard Broome and the Practice of Aboriginal History Ben Silverstein (editor), Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2018 13180749 2018 anthology criticism

'This collection traces the legacy of Richard Broome’s pathbreaking work in Aboriginal history by presenting innovative work that assesses and transforms a broad range of important debates that have captured both scholarly and popular attention in recent years.

'The book brings together a range of prominent and emerging scholars who have been exploring the contours of the field to make notable contributions to histories of frontier violence and missions, Aboriginal participation in sport and education, ways of framing relationships with land, and the critical relevance of Aboriginal life history and memoir to re-considering Australian history.

'Readers will be interested in the novel arguments on Indigenous networks and mobilities, of memoirs and histories, frontier violence, massacres, and the History Wars, as well as Noel Pearson and issues of paternalism in Aboriginal politics.' (Publication summary)

1 Patrick Wolfe (1949–2016) Ben Silverstein , 2016 single work obituary (for Patrick Wolfe )
— Appears in: History Workshop Journal , Autumn vol. 82 no. 2016; (p. 315-323)

'On 18 February 2016, in the morning, one of the most original, committed, and giving historians of colonialism ceased his work. In Patrick Wolfe's death, an immeasurable loss has been sustained by those of us thinking about and trying to challenge settler colonialism around the world.' [introduction]

1 y separately published work icon Submerged Sovereignty : Native Title within a History of Incorporation Ben Silverstein , Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press , 2013 10825731 2013 single work criticism

'The possibility of a new beginning was central to celebrations of the advent

of native title in Australia. A re-imagined history of white invasion

and settlement could, as then Prime Minister Paul Keating proclaimed,

provide the possibility for a new foundation “because after 200 years, we

will at last be building on the truth.” This “truth” was embodied in the

recognition of the presence of Indigenous communities, their laws, and

their dispossession. Unlike such British colonies as India or Nigeria, the

colonization of Australia proceeded on the basis that there were no Indigenous

people who held property rights and who therefore had any entitlement

to remain on the land or to govern. This is central to the logic of

settler colonialism, which erases the traces of Indigeneity such that settlers

replace Indigenous peoples, sovereignties, and communities on the land.

This logic has been reflected in Australian jurisprudence around settlement,

the origins of property, and the reception of British law.'

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