Bluff Rock: Autobiography of a MassacreFremantle Arts Centre Press, 2005 - 268 sidor The past is a problem for us. We know certain events happened, sometimes exactly when and yet our sometimes longing for certainty cannot be satisfied . . . We tell stories about where we come from and so who we are. We change these stories sometimes minutely, sometimes radically depending upon our audiences and our task. Bluff Rockis organised around the key question- how do we know the past? Using historical material (letters, memoirs), a tourist brochure, and local histories, it focuses on the ways that the massacre(s) of Aborigines at Bluff Rock, in New England during the 1840s has been recorded and remembered. It is the author's ability to lay herself on the line that makes this a courageous and even controversial text. Schlunke, who grew up in New England area, takes this one story from early colonial Australia and looks at the many ways it is organised as a memory of Indigenous/non-Indigenous relations. |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 16
Sida 55
... camps . She has a photograph of a man on a bike taken at the ruined death camp , green grass and trees making it look like a park with rail track and wire . This man said he had been a boy at the time and had taken vegetables to the ...
... camps . She has a photograph of a man on a bike taken at the ruined death camp , green grass and trees making it look like a park with rail track and wire . This man said he had been a boy at the time and had taken vegetables to the ...
Sida 145
... camp was about 60 feet [ 20 m ] above the gully , but slanted down to it , so they could soon get into it ... There were about 100 of them . They of course took refuge in the deep gully , of which we had no idea till we got to the camp ...
... camp was about 60 feet [ 20 m ] above the gully , but slanted down to it , so they could soon get into it ... There were about 100 of them . They of course took refuge in the deep gully , of which we had no idea till we got to the camp ...
Sida 149
... camp and burn all the Aboriginal belongings that remain . The alternatives to a fire would have been the successive snapping of spears and hacking apart of baskets , but they put all into one big fire . Irby doesn't record whether or ...
... camp and burn all the Aboriginal belongings that remain . The alternatives to a fire would have been the successive snapping of spears and hacking apart of baskets , but they put all into one big fire . Irby doesn't record whether or ...
Innehåll
INTRODUCTION | 11 |
BLUFF ROCK | 19 |
IT HAPPENED ALONG THE HIGHWAY | 29 |
Upphovsrätt | |
9 andra avsnitt visas inte
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
Aboriginal group Aboriginal workers actions Australia become Bluff Rock Massacre bodies Bolivia camp child colonial colour Connor convict cultural death Deepwater Station Demon Creek diary Edward and Leonard Edward Irby England Archives England Highway event family history father fire George Gipps Glen Innes granite happened head station Henry Parkes horse ibid idea imagine Indigenous Indigenous Australians invented Irby and Windeyer Irby's kangaroos Keating kill Aboriginal labour land Leonard Irby London look means Memoirs of Edward Mitchell Library murder Myall Creek Massacre narrative natives never Newbury night parrot non-Aboriginal organised particular past perhaps poem possible present produced punish punitive expedition rode settlement settler sheep shepherd shooting shot silence simply sort South Wales space squatters St Swithins story suggests Sydney Tenterfield things Thomas Tommy tourist leaflet town track tribe truth University Weaver William Brooks words writing