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History
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Henry Reynolds
Historian Henry Reynolds has found himself being asked these questions by many people, over many years, in all parts of Australia.The acclaimed Why Weren't We Told? is a frank account of his personal journal towards the realisation that he, like…
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History
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Henry Reynolds
The publication of The Other Side of the Frontier -- Aboriginal Resistance to the European Invasion of Australia in 1981 profoundly changed the way in which we understand the history of relations between Aboriginal Australians and European settlers.…
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People
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Henry Reynolds
"How is it our minds are not satisfied?... What means this whispering in the bottom of our hearts?"
So ended a public lecture given in 1842 by prominent Sydney barrister, Richard Windeyer. The lecture was meant to be a reasoned demolition of the…
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History
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Henry Reynolds
Was the killing of Aboriginal people by white settlers genocide? Were government policies designed to eliminate the Aboriginal races?In 1830 the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Sir George Murray, wrote: 'the adoption of any line of conduct,…
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History
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Henry Reynolds
In this critically acclaimed and ground-breaking book, first published in 1995, Henry Reynolds presented a landmark reassessment of the 19th century 'black wars' between the Tasmanian Aboriginal people and the white settlers.
Now updated for a new…
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Law and justice
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Henry Reynolds
Henry Reynolds' The Law of the Land was first published in 1987 and advanced a radical reassessment of the history of property ownership in Australia.Reynolds' work challenged the prevailing legal and historical orthodoxy under which it was assumed…
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History
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Henry Reynolds
Three themes run through this book: widespread violence on the frontier, the pervasive impact of racism on colonial society, and the absolute importance of land ownership.
Considered together, they provide a picture of the Australian frontier…
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Documentary |
Katrina Channells
When Michael Eather left Tasmania at twenty-one years of age and followed his sister to a remote Aboriginal community in the Northern Territory, he had no idea that his life would change very dramatically and forever.
As a young artist on the…
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Michele "Mickey" Hetherington, NSW
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Comedy |
Various directors
In 1973 ABC-TV produced a television version of Basically Black, a revue of comedic, satirical, political sketches and the first formal theatre production of the National Black Theatre.
Basically Black was the first all-Aboriginal television show…
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Documentary |
Various directors
Three Sisters: Women of High Degree is the result of 7 years of collaboration and filmed conversations between three Yimardoowarra Marninil, Nyikina women from the Fitzroy River, Lucy Marshall, Jeannie Wabi, and Anne Poelina, and French-Australian…
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Comedy |
Various directors
Express Yourself is NITV's first ever comedy show. Hosted by Sean Choolburra, in front of a live studio audience, this series presents some of the best Aboriginal comedians from across the country alongside musical performances.
Comedians include…
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Documentary |
Brett Charles
Ailan Kastom (meaning "island custom") is a documentary about Torres Strait culture featuring history geography, music, dance and art of the Torres Strait, as well as language and ceremonies.
Commissioned by the Torres Strait Regional Authority and…
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People
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Ann McGrath
Illicit Love is a history of love, sex, and marriage between indigenous peoples and settler citizens at the heart of two settler colonial nations, the United States and Australia.
Award-winning historian Ann McGrath illuminates interracial…
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Zelda Quakawoot, QLD
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Zelda Quakawoot, QLD
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Helen Moran
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Helen Moran
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Fiction, novels
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Anita Heiss
5 August, 1944: Over 1,000 Japanese soldiers break out of the No.12 Prisoner of War compound on the fringes of Cowra. In the carnage, hundreds are killed, many are recaptured, and some take their own lives rather than suffer the humiliation of…
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Drama |
Stuart McDonald
Mr Electric is set in outback Queensland in 1956, in a time when people still used kerosene lamps for light.
Bill, an Aboriginal electrician employed to electrify the countryside, has no place, either in the white world in which he grew up, or in…
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Arts
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Article
A poem by Nola Gregory, Geraldton, Western Australia.