99 research outputs found

    Remembering Ruby

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    ‘Remembering Ruby’ is a tribute to Doctor Ruby Langford Ginibi, a remarkable woman and an important Australian writer. Winner of numerous awards for her contribution to literature, as well as to Australian culture, Ruby was an Aboriginal Elder of the Bundjalung nation and a tireless campaigner for the rights of her people. Ruby’s writing is passionate, sincere and heart-felt, as well as extraordinarily funny and articulate. She knew that getting people to listen to her story would be fundamental to naming the hidden history of Indigenous Australia and to changing cultural perceptions in a broader context. As an elder she took on the complex and demanding role of ‘edumacation’, as she called it, and her representations of life and culture continue to provide important reflections, from an Indigenous perspective, on the effects of ignorance, racism and colonisation in an Australian context. As Aboriginal mother, aunty, teacher and scholar her writing represents a particular Australian experience for a readership of people interested in human rights and equality the world over. This monograph, in honouring Ruby Langford Ginibi, is the written expression of an ongoing dialogue between the two authors about their experiences living in Australia and the way that Ruby has interconnected with us and influenced our experiences of growing up in an Australian cultural context. It also brings into focus the many ways that Ruby Langford Ginibi’s writing has been central to challenging and changing prevailing perspectives on the lives of Indigenous people over the last twenty-five years. An excellent communicator with a wicked sense of humour, Ruby’s tireless telling of the truth about the impacts of invasion on Indigenous people makes her an important cultural ambassador for all Australians. Ruby’s totem, the Willy Wagtail, is connected to being a messenger for her people and in writing ‘Remembering Ruby’ we aim to contribute to keeping her message of hope and resilience alive and, on the anniversary of her passing, to continue to honour her inimitable and eternal spirit

    Voicing the Land - 1

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    Ruby Langford Ginibi gives a brief history of Aboriginal writing and Aboriginal history. She concludes with two prose poems: 'Terra Nullius' and 'Black Woman'

    Remembering Ruby

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    ‘Remembering Ruby’ is a tribute to Doctor Ruby Langford Ginibi, a remarkable woman and an important Australian writer. Winner of numerous awards for her contribution to literature, as well as to Australian culture, Ruby was an Aboriginal Elder of the Bundjalung nation and a tireless campaigner for the rights of her people. Ruby’s writing is passionate, sincere and heart-felt, as well as extraordinarily funny and articulate. She knew that getting people to listen to her story would be fundamental to naming the hidden history of Indigenous Australia and to changing cultural perceptions in a broader context. As an elder she took on the complex and demanding role of ‘edumacation’, as she called it, and her representations of life and culture continue to provide important reflections, from an Indigenous perspective, on the effects of ignorance, racism and colonisation in an Australian context. As Aboriginal mother, aunty, teacher and scholar her writing represents a particular Australian experience for a readership of people interested in human rights and equality the world over. This monograph, in honouring Ruby Langford Ginibi, is the written expression of an ongoing dialogue between the two authors about their experiences living in Australia and the way that Ruby has interconnected with us and influenced our experiences of growing up in an Australian cultural context. It also brings into focus the many ways that Ruby Langford Ginibi’s writing has been central to challenging and changing prevailing perspectives on the lives of Indigenous people over the last twenty-five years. An excellent communicator with a wicked sense of humour, Ruby’s tireless telling of the truth about the impacts of invasion on Indigenous people makes her an important cultural ambassador for all Australians. Ruby’s totem, the Willy Wagtail, is connected to being a messenger for her people and in writing ‘Remembering Ruby’ we aim to contribute to keeping her message of hope and resilience alive and, on the anniversary of her passing, to continue to honour her inimitable and eternal spirit

    Dancing with myth, memory and mimesis.

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    The focus of this paper is on the mythical ‘first’ national Aboriginal debutante ball, held in Australia in 1968 in celebration of the successful referendum a year earlier. On the fortieth anniversary of the event this paper explores the memories and meanings of that time to those women who debuted in front of the Prime Minister on a balmy evening in July and the significance of that time today

    Yarning with Minjungbal women: testimonial narratives of transgenerational trauma and healing explored through relationships with country and culture, community and family

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    Yarning with Minjungbal women incorporates the testimonial narratives of five women from the Minjungbal community of Tweed Heads in far northern New South Wales. Our combined metanarrative explores how we have been able to interrupt transgenerational trauma, which is the process that explains how the impacts of historical suffering are inherited by successive generations. Minjungbal women’s experiences of transgenerational trauma are discussed firstly through our ties to country and culture, secondly within the relationships in our community, and finally inside the dynamics of our families. Minjungbal women explain how we have experienced transgressions, resisted oppression, engendered healing and spread strength within each of these spheres. Minjungbal women’s relationships to country and culture, community and family have been influenced by the legacies of the past, and Minjungbal women still experience ongoing injustices from government policies and the attitudes of the dominant society. Nevertheless, this thesis contends that Minjungbal women have always been actors in resisting oppression, agents in interrupting the cycle of transgenerational trauma and instrumental in facilitating positive changes. Yarning with Minjungbal Women proposes that the key to resistance, resilience and healing lies within the teaching and learning that occurs within the context of relationships. Yarning with Minjungbal Women is therefore an embodiment of activism research as it is informed by the sharing of stories and the strengthening of relationships. Yarning with Minjungbal Women is a contribution to the field of research about the history of Minjungbal country. It contributes to existing research that explains the mechanisms by which the transgenerational transfer of trauma is inherited and passed on. This research is focussed though an Indigenous feminist heuristic perspective as the most culturally appropriate and immersive methodology for me to employ as a Minjungbal woman who has been shaped by transgenerational trauma, as I am perfectly suited to elucidate sensitive information from women in my community. The testimonial narratives were recorded using yarning as a communication method. Yarning facilitated the release of information in a way that Minjungbal women were comfortable with, giving them agency in the research process, as well as retaining the integrity of Minjungbal communication practises

    Dancing with myth, memory and mimesis.

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    The focus of this paper is on the mythical ‘first’ national Aboriginal debutante ball, held in Australia in 1968 in celebration of the successful referendum a year earlier. On the fortieth anniversary of the event this paper explores the memories and meanings of that time to those women who debuted in front of the Prime Minister on a balmy evening in July and the significance of that time today

    DR PAM JOHNSTON, MY BIG ‘BLISTER’ SISTER

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