Just So Stories

Random Reviews and Ramblings from Redcliffe


A Very Secret Trade

Allen & Unwin

April 2024

ISBN:9781761066344

Imprint: Allen & Unwin

RRP: $34.99

In 1968, anthropologist W.E.H. Stanner talked in his Boyer lecture After the Dreaming about the “cult of forgetfulness” practiced on a national scale in Australia, which he termed “the Great Australian Silence”– where Australians do not just fail to acknowledge the atrocities of the past, but choose to not think about them at all, to the point of forgetting that these events ever happened.

A different history arose in the Australian memory and it formed negative stereotypes of First Nations peoples. These stereotypes entrenched the ongoing experience of the marginalisation and systematic discrimination of First Nations peoples in Australia.

Listening to and learning from First Nations peoples about their cultures and histories can allow avenues for us to start to remember differently, in ways that heal instead of harm.

Did you know?

Australian Museum, July 2024

Table of Contents:Maps
Preface

PART ONE
1 Desire lines
2 Not ignorant of evil himself, he learned to pity the wretched
3 King Billy is dead

PART TWO
4 Mr Hunter’s collection of human miseries
5 The land is good . . . well calculated in every degree for a settlement
6 Well-watered, beautiful country

PART THREE
7 It was more as specimens of natural history that they were regretted
8 One of the remnant of a people about to disappear from the face of the earth
9 An intelligent man and one who knows natural history

PART FOUR
10 The last one of a doomed race
11 Pacificator of the Tasmanian Aborigines
12 Why in the name of Christianity cannot her wish be granted?

Appendix 1 The Worshipful Society of Body-Snatchers
Appendix 2 First People at Oyster Cove Station
Sources

Friday essay: the ‘great Australian silence’ 50 years on

The strange career of the great Australian silence

WEH Stanner and the Great Australian Silence

In 1968 this anthropologist called out Australia’s ignorance of history in one phrase

ABC Conversations: Cassandra Pybus

Flickr: “Always was, Always will be, Aboriginal land” – grafitti on the streets of Melbourne CBD

How did this Aboriginal girl’s doll from the1800s end up in an archives box in England? Another tragic history from Tasmania. Watch this episode of Stuff the English Stole on ABC iview.

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