Bluff RockFremantle Press, 01.01.2005 - 268 Seiten "The past is a problem for us. We know certain events happened, sometimes exactly when and yet our longing for certainty cannot be satisfied ... we tell stories about where we come from and who we are. We change these stories sometimes minutely, sometimes radically ... This is an original and courageous book. Schlunke, who grew up in the New England area, takes this one story — the massacre(s) of Aborigines at Bluff Rock, in New England during the 1840s — and looks at the many ways it is organised as a memory of Indigenous/non-Indigenous relations. Schlunke breaks new ground as she probes the 'hidden histories' of Indigenous-settler encounters and addresses herself urgently to the problems of 'history' in Australia." |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 12
Seite 13
... rode up to hills and looked over, and then down to creeks to swim. Our rhythms of sheep born and shorn and joined mingled with crops planted, harvested and hayed. Our lives responded almost perfectly to an anglicisation of time and ...
... rode up to hills and looked over, and then down to creeks to swim. Our rhythms of sheep born and shorn and joined mingled with crops planted, harvested and hayed. Our lives responded almost perfectly to an anglicisation of time and ...
Seite 56
... the country. His 'Germanness' explained in part his preference for listening to Bach and reading rather than playing sport; and why he rode, according to my mother, 'like a Pommy'. 56 Liminal (becomingand unbecoming) longings.
... the country. His 'Germanness' explained in part his preference for listening to Bach and reading rather than playing sport; and why he rode, according to my mother, 'like a Pommy'. 56 Liminal (becomingand unbecoming) longings.
Seite 57
Katrina Schlunke. why he rode, according to my mother, 'like a Pommy'. Germany, when understood as Schlunkeness, gave me access to much more exotic myths than Bridget Newbury and her mare — on this 'side' there was persecution ...
Katrina Schlunke. why he rode, according to my mother, 'like a Pommy'. Germany, when understood as Schlunkeness, gave me access to much more exotic myths than Bridget Newbury and her mare — on this 'side' there was persecution ...
Seite 115
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Seite 124
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Inhalt
11 | |
20 | |
32 | |
47 | |
WHAT KEATING HEARD | 64 |
LOCAL KNOWHOW | 104 |
MR IRBY ACCOUNTS | 141 |
HORSES AND DEATH | 196 |
THE DISAPPEARING
WINDEYER | 221 |
MAKING ENDS MEET | 248 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 257 |
NOTES | 259 |
REFERENCES AND WORKS CITED | 267 |
INDEX | 270 |
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Aboriginal group Aboriginal workers actions Australia become blackboy Bluff Rock Massacre bodies Bolivia camp child colonial colour connected Connor convicts cultural death Deepwater Station Demon Creek diary Edward and Leonard Edward Irby England Highway event family history father George Gipps Glen Innes granite grey happened head station Henry Parkes horse ibid idea imagine Indigenous Australians invented Irby and Windeyer Irby’s kangaroos Keating Keating’s Keating’s account kill Aboriginal kilometres labour land Leonard Irby look means Memoirs of Edward mother murder Myall Creek Massacre narrative natives never Newbury night parrot non-Aboriginal organised particular past perhaps poem possible present produced punishment punitive expedition Robinson rode sense 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 Weaver words writing