Victoria Haskins Victoria Haskins i(A79823 works by) (a.k.a. Victoria K. Haskins)
Born: Established: 1967 Brisbane, Queensland, ;
Gender: Female
Heritage: Australian
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Works By

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1 Kate Fullagar Goes Back in Time Victoria Haskins , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , vol. 21 no. 2 2024; (p. 296-297)

— Review of Bennelong and Phillip Kate Fullagar , 2023 single work biography

'Kate Fullagar’s striking new book is guaranteed to jump right off the shelf at any Australian historian happily meandering their way around the bookshop. Appearing under Simon & Schuster’s very appealing literary non-fiction imprint Scribner Australia, it grapples with one of Australia’s foundational narratives, the relationship between the first British governor, Arthur Phillip, and the First Nations leader Bennelong. The names of these men have been long etched into the national consciousness. Yet, as Fullagar explains, despite the many works of history and art dealing with their lives and doings, nobody has attempted to bring their ‘entangled lives’ together in one historical study – until this book.' (Introduction)

1 [Review] Reaching Through Time : Finding My Family’s Stories Victoria Haskins , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Historical Studies , vol. 55 no. 2 2024; (p. 404-405)

— Review of Reaching Through Time : Finding My Family's Stories Shauna Bostock , 2023 single work autobiography

'If the failure of the recent Voice referendum teaches us anything, it is that there is still a very long way to go before non-Aboriginal Australians really grasp, at a fundamental personal level, the nature of the historical injustices that Aboriginal Australians have faced. This new widely acclaimed book by Bundjalung historian Shauna Bostock promises to change all that.' (Introduction)

1 Exemption : A Gendered History Victoria Haskins , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Journal of Politics and History , March vol. 69 no. 1 2023; (p. 140-155)

'Diverse questions might be contemplated once we consider the gender implications and impacts of Aboriginal exemption policies. The article traces such questions in relation to a series of distinct episodes in the history of exemption. The first of these focuses on postwar New South Wales, where marital status was core to the application process from the point of its introduction, and the system built upon older policies of ‘training’ Aboriginal girls as servants. The second moment, moving back in time, discusses a petition for collective exemption for a group of women domestic workers in Broome, Western Australia, that was presented to a government enquiry in 1934. The third concerns the quest for release from government controls by several domestic workers brought to Adelaide in South Australia, from the Northern Territory, in the late 1920s. Finally, the article reflects upon the efforts of young women placed in service in early-twentieth-century Brisbane, Queensland, to secure exemptions, and the responses of the authorities. While exemption policies may have been designed to impose Anglo-Australian gender norms of female dependence, Aboriginal women who worked in service consistently subverted these aims, by using the discourses of domesticity to challenge and resist the authorities' power.' (Publication abstract)

1 3 y separately published work icon Living with the Locals, Early Europeans Experience of Indigenous Life John Maynard , Victoria Haskins , Canberra : National Library of Australia , 2016 10524717 2016 selected work biography

'Living with the Locals comprises the stories of 13 white men, boys and women who were taken in by the Indigenous people of the Torres Strait islands and of eastern Australia and who lived in their communities between the 1790s and the 1870s, from a few months to over 30 years. The white people had been shipwrecked or had escaped the confines of penal servitude and survived only through the Indigenous people’s generosity. Many of them were given Indigenous names—Bunboé, Murrangurk, Duramboi, Waki, Giom, Anco. They assimilated to varying degrees into an Indigenous way of life—several marrying and learning the language—and, for the most part, both parties mourned the white people’s return to European life.

'The stories in Living with the Locals provide a glimpse into Indigenous life at the point of early contact between Indigenous people and British colonists. It was a time when negative attitudes towards Indigenous people gave rise to misinterpretation of events and sensationalised versions of the stories. However, many of the white survivors spoke up against the appalling treatment of the Indigenous people, and advocated for conciliation and land rights. They also were unwilling to reveal Indigenous beliefs and customs to unsympathetic colonists.' (Publication summary)

1 Beth Dean and the Transnational Circulation of Aboriginal Dance Culture : Gender, Authority and C.P. Mountford Victoria Haskins , 2014 single work criticism
— Appears in: Circulating Cultures : Exchanges of Australian Indigenous Music, Dance and Media 2014; (p. 17-44)

'One of the highlights of the young Queen Elizabeth II’s royal tour to Australia in 1954 was the command performance of an excerpt from the ballet Corroboree. Based on Aboriginal dance steps and performed to Australian composer John Antill’s 1946 symphonic ballet of the same name, also inspired by Indigenous traditions, the ballet told the story of a young boy’s initiation into manhood. The lead role of the boy initiate was played by the choreographer, a dynamic American dancer, Beth Dean, performing in a nylon brown bodystocking and make-up mimicking ochre bodypainting, her hair pulled back in a chignon that suggested the hairstyles of the central desert. A curious spectacle, indeed, as one young English woman watched another young, American woman, play out the initiation to manhood of an Aboriginal youth, as a symbol of Australia’s distinctive cultural identity.' (Introduction)

1 My Mate Ellen : Cross-Cultural Friendship Between Women in a Pioneer Memoir Victoria Haskins , Shannon Schedlich-Day , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: The La Trobe Journal , May no. 85 2010; (p. 70-82)
Brewers 'memoirs demonstratre a number of pertinent themes that enlarge and revise previous understandings of fronier relations and, the genre of the pioneer narrative. Historians have concluded that friendships between settler and Indigenous women were rare...Minnie Brewer's memoirs provide a unique insight into the relationships between white and Aboriginal women in colonial NSW...Minnie's recollections caution us to hesitate drawing conclusions on women's cross-cultural relationships...' Source: La Trobe Journal no. 85, May 2010
1 Untitled Victoria Haskins , 2006 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Historical Studies , October vol. 37 no. 128 2006; (p. 144-145)

— Review of Isabel Flick : The Many Lives of an Extraordinary Aboriginal Woman Isabel Flick , Heather Goodall , 2004 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon One Bright Spot Victoria Haskins , New York (State) : Palgrave Macmillan , 2005 Z1476900 2005 single work life story One Bright Spot is the story of Joan 'Ming' Kingsley-Strack during the late 20s to early 40s. The book is based on Ming's diary entries, and letters she sent or received from people and organisations. Ming was an activist in the 1930s campaigning for rights for Indigenous women indentured as servants/slaves for non-Indigenous families.
1 4 y separately published work icon Uncommon Ground : White Women and Aboriginal History Anna Cole (editor), Fiona Paisley (editor), Victoria Haskins (editor), Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2005 Z1207044 2005 anthology biography Uncommon Ground is a unique exploration of the complex roles played by white women in Australian Indigenous histories. it showcases some of the latest and most interesting work in Australia on gender and cross-cultural history. Within a particular historical context, each chapter highlights the work of a woman involved in Aboriginal issues, and with Aboriginal people. Well-known as well as less prominent public figures, are included. There is a mix of activists, writers, and workers in missionary groups and administration as well as Pearl Gibbs, the leading Aboriginal woman activist who worked closely with contemporary white feminists. (Libraries Australia record).
1 'Fear the Bitch Who Sheds No Tears' : The Persistence of the Female Scapegoat in Cultural Representations of Frontier Violence and Stolen Generations Victoria Haskins , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: Lilith , no. 12 2003; (p. 50-64) The Regenerative Spirit : Volume 2 : (Un)settling, (Dis)locations, (Post-)colonial, (Re)presentations - Australian Post-Colonial Reflections 2004; (p. 150-159)
This 'article takes this powerful and resonant historical drama [Holy Day] as its focus in exploring the continuity of an Australian cultural depiction of womanhood in the representation of white women's role in colonialism' (p.50).
1 Untitled Victoria Haskins , 2003 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Historical Studies , October vol. 34 no. 122 2003; (p. 406-408)

— Review of Faith : Faith Bandler, Gentle Activist Marilyn Lake , 2002 single work biography
1 Kangkushot : The Life of Nyamal Lawman Peter Coppin Victoria Haskins , 2001 single work review
— Appears in: Studies in Western Australian History , no. 22 2001; (p. 181-184)

— Review of Kangkushot : The Life of Nyamal Lawman Peter Coppin Jolly Read , Peter Coppin , 1999 single work autobiography
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