AustLit logo

AustLit

y separately published work icon Australian Book Review periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2020... no. 420 April 2020 of Australian Book Review est. 1961 Australian Book Review
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2020 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
'Come, Memory'i"I think of you now for the first time", Peter Rose , single work poetry
'We Play and Hope'i"We play because we kow-tow and are free;", Chris Wallace-Crabbe , single work poetry
Truganini : Journey through the Apocalypse by Cassandra Pybus, Billy Griffiths , single work review
— Review of Truganini : Journey through the Apocalypse Cassandra Pybus , 2020 single work biography ;

'Truganini: Journey through the apocalypse follows the life of the strong Nuenonne woman who lived through the dramatic upheavals of invasion and dispossession and became known around the world as the so-called ‘last Tasmanian’. But the figure at the heart of this book is George Augustus Robinson, the self-styled missionary and chronicler who was charged with ‘conciliating’ with the Tasmanian Aboriginal peoples. It is primarily through his journals that historians are able to glimpse and piece together the world fractured by European arrival.'  (Introduction)

On Red Earth Walking : The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike, Western Australia 1946–1949 by Anne Scrimgeour, Jan Richardson , single work review
— Review of On Red Earth Walking : The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike, Western Australia 1946–1949 Anne Scrimgeour , 2020 multi chapter work criticism ;

'It was only seventy years ago that Aboriginal workers in the north-west of Western Australia emerged from virtual slavery on the pastoral stations in the Pilbara region. Through their own efforts, and with encouragement from some white supporters, they radically changed the industry and undermined a colonising process of government control over them. Their protest is known as the 1946–1949 pastoral workers’ strike, which Anne Scrimgeour declares ‘has the quality of a legend’. In On Red Earth Walking she verifies the story. Her meticulous archival research and evidence, from those whose planning and actions were mostly not recorded, lead her to new understandings. It is her relationship with the strikers and their descendants that makes her book unique, for she conveys their response to colonisation through their eyes.'  (Introduction)

X