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Indigenous Australia for Dummies
Taschenbuch von Larissa Behrendt
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
  • Celebrate 65,000+ years of Indigenous knowledge
  • Grasp the issues facing modern Indigenous communities
  • Recognise important milestones in Indigenous rights

Explore the rich culture and history of Australia's first peoples

What is The Dreaming? How many Indigenous languages are there? What are the protocols when addressing Indigenous Australians? Explore inside for answers to all of your questions about the world's oldest living culture and trace their long pre-1770 history through to the impact of white settlement and the ongoing struggle for human rights and self-determination. Along the way, immerse yourself in the Indigenous art, music, dance, sport, spirituality and more, that has made--and continues to make--deep and essential contributions to Australia's past, present and future.

Inside...

  • Experience 65,000+ years of culture, adaption and survival
  • Understand the true impact of colonisation
  • Learn about key political issues, struggles and solutions
  • Discover the truth behind myths and stereotypes of Indigenous Australians
  • Appreciate cultural knowledge through the arts, movies, sport and more
  • Celebrate 65,000+ years of Indigenous knowledge
  • Grasp the issues facing modern Indigenous communities
  • Recognise important milestones in Indigenous rights

Explore the rich culture and history of Australia's first peoples

What is The Dreaming? How many Indigenous languages are there? What are the protocols when addressing Indigenous Australians? Explore inside for answers to all of your questions about the world's oldest living culture and trace their long pre-1770 history through to the impact of white settlement and the ongoing struggle for human rights and self-determination. Along the way, immerse yourself in the Indigenous art, music, dance, sport, spirituality and more, that has made--and continues to make--deep and essential contributions to Australia's past, present and future.

Inside...

  • Experience 65,000+ years of culture, adaption and survival
  • Understand the true impact of colonisation
  • Learn about key political issues, struggles and solutions
  • Discover the truth behind myths and stereotypes of Indigenous Australians
  • Appreciate cultural knowledge through the arts, movies, sport and more
Über den Autor

Professor Larissa Behrendt is a Eualeyai and Kamillaroi woman. She is Distinguished Professor of the Jumbunna Institute of Indigenous Education and Research at the University of Technology, Sydney. Larissa was named as 2009 NAIDOC Person of the Year and 2011 New South Wales Australian of the Year. She was awarded an Order of Australia in 2020 for her work in Indigenous education, law and the arts.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Foreword xvii

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 2

Where to Go from Here 3

Part 1: An Ancient People: Then and Now 5

Chapter 1: Understanding Indigenous Australia 7

Indigenous Cultures: Then and Now 8

Ancient traditions 8

Diversity, diversity and more diversity 9

Contemporary painting, singing and dancing 9

Old and new ways of storytelling 10

And they can kick a ball! 10

There Goes the Neighbourhood 10

The takeover begins 11

The colony spreads 11

Loss of land 11

And children taken too 12

Fighting Back 12

The right to be equal 12

Changing the playing field 13

'We want our land back' 13

Reconciliation, practical reconciliation and intervention 14

'Sorry' - and then what? 14

New Problems for an Old Culture 14

Breaking the cycle of poverty 15

Challenging the rules and regulations 15

Setting up Indigenous enterprises 16

Doing It for Ourselves 16

Chapter 2: Rich Past, Strong Traditions 17

The First Australians 18

65,000 Years of Tradition 19

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Populations Today 21

Defining who is an Indigenous person 21

Counting the Indigenous population in Australia 23

Locating where Indigenous people live today 25

A Note about the Torres Strait Islands 27

Saying G'Day 28

'Aboriginal', 'Torres Strait Islander', 'First Nations' or 'Indigenous'? 28

'Aboriginal' or 'Aborigine'? 29

Us mob: Koori, Goori or Murri; Noongar or Nunga? 29

Opening an Event: Welcome to Country 30

Welcome or acknowledgement? 30

What do I say? 31

Whose land am I on? 32

Defining the Identity of an Aboriginal Person or a Torres Strait Islander 33

Stereotypes of Indigenous people 34

But some of us have blond hair and blue eyes! 36

Chapter 3: A Land of Cultural Diversity 37

Exploring the Indigenous Relationship to Land 38

Oral title deeds 39

Accessing another's country 39

Celebrating Cultural Diversity 39

Clans and nations 40

More than 500 different nations 40

Freshwater people and saltwater people 41

Kinship and Totemic Systems 42

Moieties and skin names 42

Totems 44

Talking Languages 45

Who speaks what now? 45

Vulnerability of languages 46

Coming Together 48

Trade routes 48

Songlines 49

Maintaining Links to Traditional Country 49

Aboriginal land councils 50

Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation 51

National parks 51

Chapter 4: Traditional Cultural Values and Practices 53

Going Back to the Dreamtime 54

How was the world made? 55

The southern sky 55

An oral tradition of storytelling 56

Indigenous Worldviews 57

Sharing based on reciprocity 57

Respecting the wisdom of Elders 58

Separating women's business from men's business 58

Respect for the environment 59

Living with Nature 60

Hunting and gathering 61

Bush food 61

Bush medicine 63

Tools 64

Looking to the Skies 67

The Dark Emu 67

Controlling the Environment 67

Fire 68

Harvesting 68

Fish traps 69

Middens 69

Shelter 69

Contemporary Cultural Values 70

Caring for Country 71

Part 2: Invasion 73

Chapter 5: First Contacts 75

Looking for the Unknown Southern Land: Contact before 1770 76

Meet the neighbours: The Macassans 76

The Dutch were here 78

And then came the English 78

Landing in Australia: Cook's Arrival 79

Cook's instructions 80

Joseph Banks' observations 81

The French floating around 81

Establishing a British Colony 82

Seeing through Indigenous Eyes: Perspectives on the Arrival 82

'We thought they were ghosts' 83

'Are they human?' 83

Chapter 6: The Brits' First Colony: 1788 85

Captain Phillip and the First Fleet 86

The long trip over 86

The Captain's orders 87

Establishing a Penal Colony 88

First impressions 89

A difficult start 90

Seeing How the Locals Dealt with the New Arrivals 91

Bennelong 92

Barangaroo 93

Pemulwuy 94

Patyegarang and Lieutenant Dawes 96

Chapter 7: Pushing the Boundaries of the Colony 99

Opening Up the Land: White Settlement Spreads 100

Spreading Disease Far and Wide 101

Meeting Aboriginal Resistance 102

Growing the British Colony 105

Over the mountains 107

To Van Diemen's Land 108

Into Moreton Bay 110

The Adelaide experiment 110

Dealing with Frontier Conflict 111

A wealth of misunderstanding 111

Official responses 112

Refuge at a cost: Missions and reserves 116

Ignoring Prior Ownership: No Treaties 120

Chapter 8: Land, Livestock and Loss 123

Clashing Cultures: Conflict over Land 124

Aboriginal people, land grants and squatters 124

Conflict on the frontier 126

Aboriginal People and the Developing Pastoral Economy 127

Off the sheep's back 128

The rise of the cattle industry 128

Aboriginal women and pastoralists 132

Asserting Rights and Other Acts of Resistance 133

The petitions of William Cooper 133

The Pilbara strike 134

The Wave Hill walk-off 135

Chapter 9: Taking the Children 137

Examining the Ideology of Assimilation 138

'Making them white' 139

'Focus on the children': Forget about the oldies 140

'For their own good' 141

Formalising the Removal Policy: Rules and Regulations 142

The impact on Indigenous children 143

The impact on Indigenous families 144

Acknowledging the Stolen Generations 145

The report of the inquiry into the Stolen Generations 145

The official response 147

Unfinished Business: Reparations and Compensation 149

Saying sorry 150

Seeking legal justice 152

The realities of litigation and compensation 153

Part 3: Indigenous Activism 157

Chapter 10: Citizenship Rights 159

Early Claims to Better Treatment 160

Flinders Island 161

Coranderrk 162

Cummeragunja reserve 164

British Subjects, but Not Quite 164

Denying basic rights 165

For their own 'protection' 166

The realities of assimilation 167

Excluding Indigenous People from the Constitution 167

The states establish their powers 168

A legal ability to discriminate 169

War Heroes: Frontier Wars and Beyond 170

The black diggers 170

Returned soldiers and racism 173

Still Denied Equality 174

Dispossession increases 174

A piece of paper to say you're white 175

Not Taking It Lying Down 175

Indigenous people organise 176

The 1938 Day of Mourning 178

Steps Towards Equality 179

Chapter 11: The 1967 Referendum 181

Growing Awareness of Indigenous Disadvantage 182

FCAA and FCAATSI 183

The Freedom Ride 184

The Referendum is Announced 186

Getting to 'yes': The constitutional campaign 187

Australia decides 188

Lasting Legacies of the Referendum 189

The power to legislate 190

But no protection against discrimination 190

The myths of the referendum 192

The unintended consequences 192

Not what was hoped for so what next? 193

Chapter 12: Land Rights 195

Establishing the Modern Land Rights Movement 196

Linking land rights and social justice 196

Setting up the Tent Embassy 198

Visiting the Black Panthers 200

Comparing Land Rights with Native Title 202

Legislating Land Rights 203

Recommending the Northern Territory Land Rights Act 204

Looking at the New South Wales Land Rights Act 207

Failing to Secure a National Land Rights Scheme 208

Following the Mabo Case: A Finding for Native Title 210

A native title package 211

The legacy of the Mabo case 213

Examining Public Reactions to Land Claims 214

Looking At the Work Still to Be Done: Taking Back the Land 215

Chapter 13: The Era of Reconciliation 217

Starting the Reconciliation Process 218

The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation 218

Paul Keating's Redfern Park speech 220

Trying to deliver on land and social justice 221

Establishing the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission 223

Defining the aims of ATSIC 224

Recognition, rights and reform 226

The Unfinished Business of Reconciliation 229

A pathway for reconciliation 230

'We call for a treaty' 234

Why a treaty? 235

What would a treaty look like? 236

First steps? 237

Chapter 14: Practical Reconciliation 239

'The Pendulum Has Swung Too Far' 240

'Practical reconciliation' explained 241

Winding back Indigenous rights 242

The history wars, or culture wars 242

A walk across the bridge 243

A Human Rights Scorecard 244

The Abolition of ATSIC 245

After ATSIC 248

A new administration 249

The National Indigenous Council 250

Shared Responsibility and Mutual Obligation 251

Emergency! Emergency! The Northern Territory Intervention 253

Key aspects of the Northern Territory Emergency Response 254

...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Genre: Importe, Soziologie
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780730390275
ISBN-10: 0730390276
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Behrendt, Larissa
Auflage: 2nd edition
Hersteller: Wiley
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 234 x 194 x 26 mm
Von/Mit: Larissa Behrendt
Erscheinungsdatum: 15.03.2021
Gewicht: 0,884 kg
Artikel-ID: 119006251
Über den Autor

Professor Larissa Behrendt is a Eualeyai and Kamillaroi woman. She is Distinguished Professor of the Jumbunna Institute of Indigenous Education and Research at the University of Technology, Sydney. Larissa was named as 2009 NAIDOC Person of the Year and 2011 New South Wales Australian of the Year. She was awarded an Order of Australia in 2020 for her work in Indigenous education, law and the arts.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Foreword xvii

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 2

Where to Go from Here 3

Part 1: An Ancient People: Then and Now 5

Chapter 1: Understanding Indigenous Australia 7

Indigenous Cultures: Then and Now 8

Ancient traditions 8

Diversity, diversity and more diversity 9

Contemporary painting, singing and dancing 9

Old and new ways of storytelling 10

And they can kick a ball! 10

There Goes the Neighbourhood 10

The takeover begins 11

The colony spreads 11

Loss of land 11

And children taken too 12

Fighting Back 12

The right to be equal 12

Changing the playing field 13

'We want our land back' 13

Reconciliation, practical reconciliation and intervention 14

'Sorry' - and then what? 14

New Problems for an Old Culture 14

Breaking the cycle of poverty 15

Challenging the rules and regulations 15

Setting up Indigenous enterprises 16

Doing It for Ourselves 16

Chapter 2: Rich Past, Strong Traditions 17

The First Australians 18

65,000 Years of Tradition 19

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Populations Today 21

Defining who is an Indigenous person 21

Counting the Indigenous population in Australia 23

Locating where Indigenous people live today 25

A Note about the Torres Strait Islands 27

Saying G'Day 28

'Aboriginal', 'Torres Strait Islander', 'First Nations' or 'Indigenous'? 28

'Aboriginal' or 'Aborigine'? 29

Us mob: Koori, Goori or Murri; Noongar or Nunga? 29

Opening an Event: Welcome to Country 30

Welcome or acknowledgement? 30

What do I say? 31

Whose land am I on? 32

Defining the Identity of an Aboriginal Person or a Torres Strait Islander 33

Stereotypes of Indigenous people 34

But some of us have blond hair and blue eyes! 36

Chapter 3: A Land of Cultural Diversity 37

Exploring the Indigenous Relationship to Land 38

Oral title deeds 39

Accessing another's country 39

Celebrating Cultural Diversity 39

Clans and nations 40

More than 500 different nations 40

Freshwater people and saltwater people 41

Kinship and Totemic Systems 42

Moieties and skin names 42

Totems 44

Talking Languages 45

Who speaks what now? 45

Vulnerability of languages 46

Coming Together 48

Trade routes 48

Songlines 49

Maintaining Links to Traditional Country 49

Aboriginal land councils 50

Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation 51

National parks 51

Chapter 4: Traditional Cultural Values and Practices 53

Going Back to the Dreamtime 54

How was the world made? 55

The southern sky 55

An oral tradition of storytelling 56

Indigenous Worldviews 57

Sharing based on reciprocity 57

Respecting the wisdom of Elders 58

Separating women's business from men's business 58

Respect for the environment 59

Living with Nature 60

Hunting and gathering 61

Bush food 61

Bush medicine 63

Tools 64

Looking to the Skies 67

The Dark Emu 67

Controlling the Environment 67

Fire 68

Harvesting 68

Fish traps 69

Middens 69

Shelter 69

Contemporary Cultural Values 70

Caring for Country 71

Part 2: Invasion 73

Chapter 5: First Contacts 75

Looking for the Unknown Southern Land: Contact before 1770 76

Meet the neighbours: The Macassans 76

The Dutch were here 78

And then came the English 78

Landing in Australia: Cook's Arrival 79

Cook's instructions 80

Joseph Banks' observations 81

The French floating around 81

Establishing a British Colony 82

Seeing through Indigenous Eyes: Perspectives on the Arrival 82

'We thought they were ghosts' 83

'Are they human?' 83

Chapter 6: The Brits' First Colony: 1788 85

Captain Phillip and the First Fleet 86

The long trip over 86

The Captain's orders 87

Establishing a Penal Colony 88

First impressions 89

A difficult start 90

Seeing How the Locals Dealt with the New Arrivals 91

Bennelong 92

Barangaroo 93

Pemulwuy 94

Patyegarang and Lieutenant Dawes 96

Chapter 7: Pushing the Boundaries of the Colony 99

Opening Up the Land: White Settlement Spreads 100

Spreading Disease Far and Wide 101

Meeting Aboriginal Resistance 102

Growing the British Colony 105

Over the mountains 107

To Van Diemen's Land 108

Into Moreton Bay 110

The Adelaide experiment 110

Dealing with Frontier Conflict 111

A wealth of misunderstanding 111

Official responses 112

Refuge at a cost: Missions and reserves 116

Ignoring Prior Ownership: No Treaties 120

Chapter 8: Land, Livestock and Loss 123

Clashing Cultures: Conflict over Land 124

Aboriginal people, land grants and squatters 124

Conflict on the frontier 126

Aboriginal People and the Developing Pastoral Economy 127

Off the sheep's back 128

The rise of the cattle industry 128

Aboriginal women and pastoralists 132

Asserting Rights and Other Acts of Resistance 133

The petitions of William Cooper 133

The Pilbara strike 134

The Wave Hill walk-off 135

Chapter 9: Taking the Children 137

Examining the Ideology of Assimilation 138

'Making them white' 139

'Focus on the children': Forget about the oldies 140

'For their own good' 141

Formalising the Removal Policy: Rules and Regulations 142

The impact on Indigenous children 143

The impact on Indigenous families 144

Acknowledging the Stolen Generations 145

The report of the inquiry into the Stolen Generations 145

The official response 147

Unfinished Business: Reparations and Compensation 149

Saying sorry 150

Seeking legal justice 152

The realities of litigation and compensation 153

Part 3: Indigenous Activism 157

Chapter 10: Citizenship Rights 159

Early Claims to Better Treatment 160

Flinders Island 161

Coranderrk 162

Cummeragunja reserve 164

British Subjects, but Not Quite 164

Denying basic rights 165

For their own 'protection' 166

The realities of assimilation 167

Excluding Indigenous People from the Constitution 167

The states establish their powers 168

A legal ability to discriminate 169

War Heroes: Frontier Wars and Beyond 170

The black diggers 170

Returned soldiers and racism 173

Still Denied Equality 174

Dispossession increases 174

A piece of paper to say you're white 175

Not Taking It Lying Down 175

Indigenous people organise 176

The 1938 Day of Mourning 178

Steps Towards Equality 179

Chapter 11: The 1967 Referendum 181

Growing Awareness of Indigenous Disadvantage 182

FCAA and FCAATSI 183

The Freedom Ride 184

The Referendum is Announced 186

Getting to 'yes': The constitutional campaign 187

Australia decides 188

Lasting Legacies of the Referendum 189

The power to legislate 190

But no protection against discrimination 190

The myths of the referendum 192

The unintended consequences 192

Not what was hoped for so what next? 193

Chapter 12: Land Rights 195

Establishing the Modern Land Rights Movement 196

Linking land rights and social justice 196

Setting up the Tent Embassy 198

Visiting the Black Panthers 200

Comparing Land Rights with Native Title 202

Legislating Land Rights 203

Recommending the Northern Territory Land Rights Act 204

Looking at the New South Wales Land Rights Act 207

Failing to Secure a National Land Rights Scheme 208

Following the Mabo Case: A Finding for Native Title 210

A native title package 211

The legacy of the Mabo case 213

Examining Public Reactions to Land Claims 214

Looking At the Work Still to Be Done: Taking Back the Land 215

Chapter 13: The Era of Reconciliation 217

Starting the Reconciliation Process 218

The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation 218

Paul Keating's Redfern Park speech 220

Trying to deliver on land and social justice 221

Establishing the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission 223

Defining the aims of ATSIC 224

Recognition, rights and reform 226

The Unfinished Business of Reconciliation 229

A pathway for reconciliation 230

'We call for a treaty' 234

Why a treaty? 235

What would a treaty look like? 236

First steps? 237

Chapter 14: Practical Reconciliation 239

'The Pendulum Has Swung Too Far' 240

'Practical reconciliation' explained 241

Winding back Indigenous rights 242

The history wars, or culture wars 242

A walk across the bridge 243

A Human Rights Scorecard 244

The Abolition of ATSIC 245

After ATSIC 248

A new administration 249

The National Indigenous Council 250

Shared Responsibility and Mutual Obligation 251

Emergency! Emergency! The Northern Territory Intervention 253

Key aspects of the Northern Territory Emergency Response 254

...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Genre: Importe, Soziologie
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780730390275
ISBN-10: 0730390276
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Behrendt, Larissa
Auflage: 2nd edition
Hersteller: Wiley
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 234 x 194 x 26 mm
Von/Mit: Larissa Behrendt
Erscheinungsdatum: 15.03.2021
Gewicht: 0,884 kg
Artikel-ID: 119006251
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