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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
281

The development of multicultural and antiracist books for use in schools 1973-1993

Klein, Gillian January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
282

Struggle and resistance : Punjabi women in Birmingham

Guru, S. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
283

Homo and others : articulating postcolonial queer subjectivity

Chu, Wei-cheng Raymond January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
284

African-Carribean mothering : re-constructing a 'new' identity

Reynolds, Tracey Ann January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
285

Legitimising racism: Howard, Hanson, and the 1996 "race debate"

Newman, Paul Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
286

Legitimising racism: Howard, Hanson, and the 1996 "race debate"

Newman, Paul Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
287

Legitimising racism: Howard, Hanson, and the 1996 "race debate"

Newman, Paul Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
288

Legitimising racism: Howard, Hanson, and the 1996 "race debate"

Newman, Paul Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
289

Legitimising racism: Howard, Hanson, and the 1996 "race debate"

Newman, Paul Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
290

Spurning yearning and learning Aboriginality: ambivalence shaping the lives of non-aboriginal Australians

D.Palmer@murdoch.edu.au, David Palmer January 1999 (has links)
Much academic work concerned with social and cultural processes in Australia takes as its field of inquiry how the lives of Aboriginal Australians have been changed and impacted on by colonisation. Rarely has scholarship attempted to uncover some of the ways Aboriginality and Aboriginal people have become integral in the shaping of the lives of non-Aboriginal Australians. Ths thesis takes to heart the challenge of subjecting oneself and one's own social and cultural position to the rigours of sociological scrutiny and sets out to examine how crucial Aboriginality and Aboriginal people have been in shaping the lives, identities and economies of non-Aboriginal Australians. Drawing on the work of Homi Bhabha the thesis argues that ambivalence, whch underlies much of colonial discourse, can have a tremendously disruptive and unsettling effect on the authority, identities and everyday social lives of non-Aboriginal people. The thesis explores something of the diversity of this ambivalence by focusing attention on five groups of people (One Nation Supporters, retired tourists, 'alternative lifestylers', governmental workers and early colonists); two historical moments(early colonial times and the late 1990s); and two regions (the south-west and Kimberley of Western Australia). The thesis argues that one of the effects of ths ambivalence is that the social worlds of non- Aboriginal Australians are often subjected to challenge and change. In early colonial times many 'settlers' were tom between the will to colonise and economic and cultural reliance on the efforts and knowledge of Aboriginal people. More recently, One Nation supporters attempt to distance themselves from Aboriginal people by constituting them as the barbaric and parasitical other. At the same time, Hansonites indirectly position Aboriginality as central to their own identity and political future. Another group, retired tourists, regularly perpetuate old colonial tropes and publicly express their disdain of Aboriginal people. At the same time, these people yearn for and engage in social practices otherwise associated with Aborigrnal culture. Behind both groups' public attacks on Aborigines as cannibals and the 'Aboriginal Industry' as spongers lies a deep political and cultural reliance on Aboriginality. Romantics and others who aspire to consume and mimic Aboriginal culture are likewise regularly ambivalent and contradictory in their treatment of Aborigmality. It is arguable that many are selfinterested and seek to plunder Aboriginal cultural. However, the very romance that prompts their mimicry can and does act to unsettle the certainty of non-Aboriginal dominance. This prompts people to re-examine their identities and social practices. Ambivalence and complexity is also central to the lives of those involved in the business of Aboriginal governance. On the one hand, these people are clearly implicated in the government and regulation of Aboriginal people. On the other hand, liberal discourse on fairness and equality of opportunity force governmental workers to increase their contact and reliance on Aboriginal people. This often has the effect of provoking changes in non-Aboriginal people's personal and working lives. The thesis concludes that the engagement of colonial discourse with Aboriginalities inevitably leads to an ambivalence that disables the monolithic dominance of non-Aboriginal Australians. In a range of ways this ambivalence can and does produce conditions whch undermine and transform the cultural lives and identities of non-Aborignal Australians.

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