NEW: Emerging Scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies, Vol. 2-3, No. 1, 2016-17
ISSN 2208-1232 | Published by UTS ePRESS | epress.lib.uts.edu.au/student-journals/index.php/NESAIS
CONTENTS
Contents
© 2018 by the author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
Preface
Articles
Seeing Aboriginal history in black and white: the contested history of the Stolen Generation 1–8
Arielle De Bono
Failing to address issues of interest for Aboriginal Australians in the 2016 Federal election campaign 9–16
Rashini Suriyaarachchi
A historical analysis of the economic marginalisation of Aboriginal people and the ruralisation of Aboriginal issues 17–23
Matthew Byers
Man, Animal, Other: the intersections of Racism, Speciesism and Problematic Recognition within Indigenous Australia 24–31
Elena Wewer
Beyond Genocide: a comparative analysis of the elimination of Australia’s Indigenous people 32–37
Thomas Crotty
Modernity to Makarrata: Australia Through the Post‐Colonial Lens 38–43
Daniel Cunningham
Native Title vs. Land Rights: is change more effective when it is achieved through social and political activism or the courts? 44–49
Mia Dabelstein
Rethinking Western perceptions of Indigenous knowledge and economy 50–55
Alex Menyhart
Post‐Colonial Australia: Fact or Fabrication? 56–61
Isabella Saunders
Can the international human rights framework improve the rights of Indigenous Australians? 62–67
Christina Crawford
Reviews
Samson and Delilah revisited 68–71
Jacinta Bailey
An outstanding debt: Noel Pearson’s A Rightful Place. Race, Recognition and a more complete Commonwealth 72–74
Zoë Carney‐Chapus
The tragedy of Jacob by Dena Curtis 75–77
Alexandra Garcia
Rabbit Proof Fence: a critical analysis 78–80
Laura Hermannová
The white‐seared landscape: Walkabout as iconic Australian counterculture 81–83
Jack McDonald
Stan Grant’s ‘Racism is Destroying the Australian Dream’ speech 84–86
Sarah Payne
Bronwyn Bancroft’s Grandmother’s Country: History, art and survival 87–90
Stephanie Rago
Carpentaria: a foray into Indigenous consciousness 91–94
Alessandra Solomon
Reimagining the inheritance of loss of country: Stan Grant’s Talking to My Country 95–97
Ruchira Talukdar
Site Visits
Captain Cook’s landing site, Kurnell 98–99
Madeline Cox
I have a dream mural site visit, Newtown 100–102
Zac Crellin
Site visit to Victoria Park, Glebe 103–104
Emily Mundzic
Blog Posts
The politics of recognition 105–106
Sara Borman
Making the case for constitutional reform 107–108
Alice Taylor
Facing national historical guilt in teaching history: a comparison between Australia and Germany 109–110
Hanna Rosalie Wortmann