Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 Inscription and the Settler Colony : Theorising Aboriginal Textuality Today
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'In recent years, the study of Aboriginal literatures has moved from a marginal interest of Australian literature to a site of global inquiry. Due to limited Aboriginal representation in the formal institutions of literary studies, this shift has arguably not coincided with sufficient reciprocal interpretive mechanisms capable of situating the Aboriginal text in a dynamic relationship with Aboriginal culture. As such, many of these discourses have reconstituted culturally inappropriate anthropological mechanisms in their engagements with contemporary Aboriginal literatures (Araluen, ‘Shame’). The unstable entanglements of power, sovereignty and exclusion that frame the Australian conditions of settler coloniality are manifest in the institutions and disciplines that teach, publish, and interpret Aboriginal literature. In the space of Indigenous research discourse and practice, Ngati Awa and Ngati Porou academic Linda Tuhiwai Smith’s pioneering work on decolonial Indigenous methods and practices, Decolonising Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples (1999), demonstrates that the concept of the discipline is not only an organising system of knowledge but also a system of organising people and bodies. She argues that the intellectual productions of nineteenth-century imperialism, including notions of civilisation and the Other, are bound to and assert geographic and economic forces of appropriation, expropriation and incorporation (69). These knowledges not only form academic disciplines but have also been used to discipline the colonised through exclusion, marginalisation and denial.'  (Publication abstract)

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    y separately published work icon Australian Literary Studies vol. 39 no. 1 25 May 2024 28162343 2024 periodical issue

    'We are so pleased to announce the publication of Australian Literary Studies Volume 39, No. 1, with some fascinating literary scholarship.  

    'This issue includes the final PhD Prize winning essay by Evelyn Araluen CorrJames Gourley's exploration of Care for Country in Western Sydney literature; Maggie Shapley's reckoning of the canon through Australian female poets in anthologies; and Mandy Treagus tracking some watery forms. 

    'In addition, you'll find reviews of The Antipodean Laboratory: Making Colonial Knowledge, 1770–1870, reviewed by Kate Darian-Smith, and Murnane, reviewed by Joseph Steinberg.' (Publication summary)

    2024
Last amended 28 May 2024 08:32:08
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