This editorial 'discusses various reports published within the November 2006 issue of Australian Aboriginal Studies, including one describing an early collaborative health program between Indigenous and Western health professionals and another providing a case study where Indigenous men seek health that is culturally based and under their own control.' (Introduction)
Contents indexed selectively.
'The article presents a biography of Daisy Bates, a scholar in the field of Aboriginal history in Australia. It cites the reason why the native race was vanishing according to Bates. She was the foster-daughter of Sir George Outram, a hero of the Indian army buried with full honors in Westminister Abbey, England. She decided to travel to Australia after a doctor diagnosed a spot on her lungs as a warning of tuberculosis.' (Publication abstract)
'I begin this review with an admission. Not versed in the arcane language of postmodernist theory or any of its various offshoots, I found large slabs of this book beyond my powers of comprehension. Take the following: ‘In [Charles] Walter’s interest in the Aboriginal people of Victoria expressed through a visual language we see the circulation of mimesis and alterity as white fascination with Aboriginal mimicry is itself expressed mimetically when subject reaches out to embrace object’ (p.118). There is more of this sort of stuff peppered throughout the book. Much more. This is unfortunate. The book is obviously aimed at a select band of fellow travellers, but beneath the layers of jargon Jane Lydon reveals glimpses of a fascinating story.' [Review Essay]