The Routledge Handbook of Australian Indigenous Peoples and Futures
Herausgeber: Carlson, Bronwyn; O'Sullivan, Sandy; Day, Madi
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The Routledge Handbook of Australian Indigenous Peoples and Futures
Herausgeber: Carlson, Bronwyn; O'Sullivan, Sandy; Day, Madi
- Gebundenes Buch
Providing an international reference work written solely by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors, this book offers a powerful overview of emergent and topical research in the field of global Indigenous studies.
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Providing an international reference work written solely by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors, this book offers a powerful overview of emergent and topical research in the field of global Indigenous studies.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Routledge Anthropology Handbooks
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 954g
- ISBN-13: 9781032222530
- ISBN-10: 1032222530
- Artikelnr.: 68100010
- Routledge Anthropology Handbooks
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 954g
- ISBN-13: 9781032222530
- ISBN-10: 1032222530
- Artikelnr.: 68100010
Bronwyn Carlson is Head of the Indigenous Studies Department, Faculty of Arts, Macquarie University, Australia. Madi Day is a Lecturer in the Department of Indigenous Studies at Macquarie University, Australia. Sandy O'Sullivan is a Professor of Indigenous Studies at Macquarie University, Australia. Tristan Kennedy is Pro Vice-Chancellor (Indigenous) at Monash University, Australia.
Introduction Part 1: Future Worlds 1. The future is Indigenous 2. Foreign
policy futures 3. A certain wisdom: 'living law' before 'more, more, more'
4. Staying with the fire: sustainable futures using Indigenous Knowledges
5. Settler colonialism, Jews and Indigenous peoples: theorising homelands
as a point of connection in Indigenous-Jewish relations in so-called
Australia 6. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inclusion in the
workplace: challenging racist policy and practice 7. There is no such thing
as a blank slate: accountability in decolonising universities 8. Indigenous
voice as self-determination: co-designing a shared future for all
Australians 9. Fuel, flame and smoke: on Indigenous fantasy 10. The voice
of Country: our obligation and responsibility to listen 11. Indigenous
futures for subject English: a profile of practice Part 2: Intimacies,
relationalities and locating ourselves 12. Unsettling the settler state and
being on the frontline of Indigenous resistance 13. Visual liberations and
embodiments of ancestral memory: exploring the relational engagements of
Indigenous queer artists 14. Utopianism, eco-criticism and colonial
fantasy: Germain Greer's White Beech as a case study in settler futurity
15. Yarning with the archives 16. Digital Indigiqueers: locating queer mob
in the literature 17. The edge of the tide: exploring the complexities and
futures of Aboriginality from the critical perspectives of Indigenous
researchers 18. Our young people are our future: cultural continuity and
the Illawarra Flame Trees 19. Be(com)ing in the city: Indigenous queer
relationalities and community building 20. Indigenous futures and deep time
connections to place 21. The question, or who asks for evidence of
queerness in Aboriginal culture? 22. Future Tweed: envisioning the
possibilities of Bundjalung Country, community and culture through
speculative fiction 23. The museum of the imagination: curating against the
colonial insistence on diminishing Indigeneity 24. Lessons on decoloniality
from Blak and Black Sahulian ecologies and the Aboriginal philosophy of
Everywhen Part 3: Digital futures 25. The future of Australian Indigenous
records and archives is social 26. Beyond zeroes and ones: walking the
daisy talk with D'harawal Elders to understand their (dis)connection with
internet services 27. Digital futures: health-seeking on social media 28.
Indigenous studies and the future of knowledge formation in higher
education 29. Digital Indigenous oral knowledge 30. Reflections on
Indigenous LGBTIQ+ communities online
policy futures 3. A certain wisdom: 'living law' before 'more, more, more'
4. Staying with the fire: sustainable futures using Indigenous Knowledges
5. Settler colonialism, Jews and Indigenous peoples: theorising homelands
as a point of connection in Indigenous-Jewish relations in so-called
Australia 6. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inclusion in the
workplace: challenging racist policy and practice 7. There is no such thing
as a blank slate: accountability in decolonising universities 8. Indigenous
voice as self-determination: co-designing a shared future for all
Australians 9. Fuel, flame and smoke: on Indigenous fantasy 10. The voice
of Country: our obligation and responsibility to listen 11. Indigenous
futures for subject English: a profile of practice Part 2: Intimacies,
relationalities and locating ourselves 12. Unsettling the settler state and
being on the frontline of Indigenous resistance 13. Visual liberations and
embodiments of ancestral memory: exploring the relational engagements of
Indigenous queer artists 14. Utopianism, eco-criticism and colonial
fantasy: Germain Greer's White Beech as a case study in settler futurity
15. Yarning with the archives 16. Digital Indigiqueers: locating queer mob
in the literature 17. The edge of the tide: exploring the complexities and
futures of Aboriginality from the critical perspectives of Indigenous
researchers 18. Our young people are our future: cultural continuity and
the Illawarra Flame Trees 19. Be(com)ing in the city: Indigenous queer
relationalities and community building 20. Indigenous futures and deep time
connections to place 21. The question, or who asks for evidence of
queerness in Aboriginal culture? 22. Future Tweed: envisioning the
possibilities of Bundjalung Country, community and culture through
speculative fiction 23. The museum of the imagination: curating against the
colonial insistence on diminishing Indigeneity 24. Lessons on decoloniality
from Blak and Black Sahulian ecologies and the Aboriginal philosophy of
Everywhen Part 3: Digital futures 25. The future of Australian Indigenous
records and archives is social 26. Beyond zeroes and ones: walking the
daisy talk with D'harawal Elders to understand their (dis)connection with
internet services 27. Digital futures: health-seeking on social media 28.
Indigenous studies and the future of knowledge formation in higher
education 29. Digital Indigenous oral knowledge 30. Reflections on
Indigenous LGBTIQ+ communities online
Introduction Part 1: Future Worlds 1. The future is Indigenous 2. Foreign
policy futures 3. A certain wisdom: 'living law' before 'more, more, more'
4. Staying with the fire: sustainable futures using Indigenous Knowledges
5. Settler colonialism, Jews and Indigenous peoples: theorising homelands
as a point of connection in Indigenous-Jewish relations in so-called
Australia 6. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inclusion in the
workplace: challenging racist policy and practice 7. There is no such thing
as a blank slate: accountability in decolonising universities 8. Indigenous
voice as self-determination: co-designing a shared future for all
Australians 9. Fuel, flame and smoke: on Indigenous fantasy 10. The voice
of Country: our obligation and responsibility to listen 11. Indigenous
futures for subject English: a profile of practice Part 2: Intimacies,
relationalities and locating ourselves 12. Unsettling the settler state and
being on the frontline of Indigenous resistance 13. Visual liberations and
embodiments of ancestral memory: exploring the relational engagements of
Indigenous queer artists 14. Utopianism, eco-criticism and colonial
fantasy: Germain Greer's White Beech as a case study in settler futurity
15. Yarning with the archives 16. Digital Indigiqueers: locating queer mob
in the literature 17. The edge of the tide: exploring the complexities and
futures of Aboriginality from the critical perspectives of Indigenous
researchers 18. Our young people are our future: cultural continuity and
the Illawarra Flame Trees 19. Be(com)ing in the city: Indigenous queer
relationalities and community building 20. Indigenous futures and deep time
connections to place 21. The question, or who asks for evidence of
queerness in Aboriginal culture? 22. Future Tweed: envisioning the
possibilities of Bundjalung Country, community and culture through
speculative fiction 23. The museum of the imagination: curating against the
colonial insistence on diminishing Indigeneity 24. Lessons on decoloniality
from Blak and Black Sahulian ecologies and the Aboriginal philosophy of
Everywhen Part 3: Digital futures 25. The future of Australian Indigenous
records and archives is social 26. Beyond zeroes and ones: walking the
daisy talk with D'harawal Elders to understand their (dis)connection with
internet services 27. Digital futures: health-seeking on social media 28.
Indigenous studies and the future of knowledge formation in higher
education 29. Digital Indigenous oral knowledge 30. Reflections on
Indigenous LGBTIQ+ communities online
policy futures 3. A certain wisdom: 'living law' before 'more, more, more'
4. Staying with the fire: sustainable futures using Indigenous Knowledges
5. Settler colonialism, Jews and Indigenous peoples: theorising homelands
as a point of connection in Indigenous-Jewish relations in so-called
Australia 6. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inclusion in the
workplace: challenging racist policy and practice 7. There is no such thing
as a blank slate: accountability in decolonising universities 8. Indigenous
voice as self-determination: co-designing a shared future for all
Australians 9. Fuel, flame and smoke: on Indigenous fantasy 10. The voice
of Country: our obligation and responsibility to listen 11. Indigenous
futures for subject English: a profile of practice Part 2: Intimacies,
relationalities and locating ourselves 12. Unsettling the settler state and
being on the frontline of Indigenous resistance 13. Visual liberations and
embodiments of ancestral memory: exploring the relational engagements of
Indigenous queer artists 14. Utopianism, eco-criticism and colonial
fantasy: Germain Greer's White Beech as a case study in settler futurity
15. Yarning with the archives 16. Digital Indigiqueers: locating queer mob
in the literature 17. The edge of the tide: exploring the complexities and
futures of Aboriginality from the critical perspectives of Indigenous
researchers 18. Our young people are our future: cultural continuity and
the Illawarra Flame Trees 19. Be(com)ing in the city: Indigenous queer
relationalities and community building 20. Indigenous futures and deep time
connections to place 21. The question, or who asks for evidence of
queerness in Aboriginal culture? 22. Future Tweed: envisioning the
possibilities of Bundjalung Country, community and culture through
speculative fiction 23. The museum of the imagination: curating against the
colonial insistence on diminishing Indigeneity 24. Lessons on decoloniality
from Blak and Black Sahulian ecologies and the Aboriginal philosophy of
Everywhen Part 3: Digital futures 25. The future of Australian Indigenous
records and archives is social 26. Beyond zeroes and ones: walking the
daisy talk with D'harawal Elders to understand their (dis)connection with
internet services 27. Digital futures: health-seeking on social media 28.
Indigenous studies and the future of knowledge formation in higher
education 29. Digital Indigenous oral knowledge 30. Reflections on
Indigenous LGBTIQ+ communities online