Issue Details: First known date: 2017... 2017 [Review] Indigenous Australians, Social Justice and Legal Reform: Honouring Elliott Johnston, Constitutional Recognition of First Peoples in Australia: Theories and Comparative Perspectives, Treaty and Statehood: Aboriginal Self-determination
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'I approach these books as a lawyer with interests in history, governance and the development of law and legal systems, but very little background in Indigenous studies. My hope, in reading and reviewing this substantial body of work, was that I would learn more about Indigenous law. That hope has not been disappointed.'

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Aboriginal History no. 41 2017 17480676 2017 periodical issue non-fiction

    "The articles in Volume 41 bring to light historical sources from the colonial frontier in Tasmania (Nicholas Brodie and Kristyn Harman) and South Australia (Skye Kirchauff) to provoke reassessments of colonial attitudes and expectations. Karen Hughes brings into focus little-known, intimate aspects of Indigenous women’s experience with African American servicemen on the World War II Australian home front. Diana Young’s study of accounts of Pitjantjatjara women’s careful productions in the Ernabella craft rooms in the mid-twentieth century deepens our understanding of a relatively neglected aspect of the art history of ‘first generation, postcontact Indigenous art-making among Australian Western Desert peoples’. Nikita Vanderbyl explores records of tourists’ visits to Aboriginal reserves in the late 1800s and early 1900s, focusing on the emotive aspects of the visits, and making the links between such tourism and colonialism. Janice Newton provides a close examination of the cross-cultural signs implicated in a documented ceremonial performance in early Port Phillip. Heather Burke, Lynley Wallis and their collaborators compare a reconstructed stone building in Richmond, Queensland, with other reputedly fortified structures, and find that the historical and structural evidence for this interpretation are equivocal, pointing to imaginaries of the violent frontier as much as tangible experience."

    Source: ANU Press.

    2017
    pg. 219
Last amended 18 Oct 2023 14:22:54
219 http://press-files.anu.edu.au/downloads/press/n4117/pdf/book_review12.pdf [Review] Indigenous Australians, Social Justice and Legal Reform: Honouring Elliott Johnston, Constitutional Recognition of First Peoples in Australia: Theories and Comparative Perspectives, Treaty and Statehood: Aboriginal Self-determinationsmall AustLit logo Aboriginal History
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